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Home/ Questions/Q 4062758
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T15:38:21+00:00 2026-05-20T15:38:21+00:00

I have a method which I am testing. Given certain inputs, it should write

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I have a method which I am testing. Given certain inputs, it should write a failure method to the logger (an ILogger). The interface has several overloads for Log(), as well as some properties (ex. a logging level). I am mocking the logger using FakeItEasy.

What I want to assert is that a call to Log() has happened. However, I don’t care about which specific overload got used. How can I do this?

My ideas:

// Doesn't work, since a different overload (with more parameters) is used.
A.CallTo(() => mockLogger.Log(null)).WithAnyArguments().MustHaveHappened();

// "Works", but if the code were to call something else on the logger
// (ex. change the logging level), this would also pass!
Any.CallTo(mockLogger).MustHaveHappened();
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T15:38:21+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 3:38 pm

    Edit

    This can be done using the following syntax:

    A.CallTo(logger).Where(x => x.Method.Name == "Log").MustHaveHappened()
    

    Original answer

    There’s no easy way of doing that, and – correct me if I’m wrong – I don’t think there is in any mocking framework.

    That being said there is a – not so easy – way to do it provided in the example below.

    public interface ILogger
    {
        void Log(string value);
        void Log(object value);
    }
    
    public class LoggerTests
    {
        public void FakeGetCallsExample()
        {
            var logger = A.Fake<ILogger>();
    
            logger.Log("whatever");
    
            var callsToLog = Fake.GetCalls(logger).Where(x => x.Method.Name.Equals("Log"));
    
            // Asserting with NUnit.
            Assert.That(callsToLog(), Is.Not.Empty);
        }
    
        // The following does not work as of now but I'll seriously consider
        // implementing it:
        public void AnyCallToWithCallSpecificationExample()
        {
            var logger = A.Fake<ILogger>();
    
            logger.Log("whatever");
    
            // I would add a "filtering" method to the Any.CallTo-syntax:
            Any.CallTo(logger).WhereCallMatches(x => x.Method.Name.Equals("Log")).MustHaveHappened();
    
            // It would also enable an extension method:
            Any.CallTo(logger).ToMethodNamed("Log").MustHaveHappened();
        }
    }
    
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