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Home/ Questions/Q 676485
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T00:55:59+00:00 2026-05-14T00:55:59+00:00

I use VS2008 targetting .NET 2.0 Framework, and, just in case, no I can’t

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I use VS2008 targetting .NET 2.0 Framework, and, just in case, no I can’t change this 🙂

I have a DateCalculator class. Its method GetNextExpirationDate attempts to determine the next expiration, internally using DateTime.Today as a baseline date.

As I was writing unit tests, I realized that I wanted to test GetNextExpirationDate for different ‘today’ dates.

What’s the best way to do this? Here are some alternatives I’ve considered:

  • Expose a property/overloaded method with argument baselineDate and only use it from the unit test. In actual client code, disregard the property/overloaded method in favour of the method that defaults baselineDate to DateTime.Today. I’m reluctant to do this as it makes the public interface of the DateCalculator class awkward.
  • Create a protected field called baselineDate that is internally set to DateTime.Today. When testing, derive a DateCalculatorForTesting from DateCalculator and set baslineDate via the constructor. It keeps the public interface clean, but still isn’t great – baselineDate was made protected and a derived class is required, both solely for testing.
  • Use extension methods. I tried this after adding the ExtensionAttribute, then realized it wouldn’t work because extension methods can’t access private/protected variables. I initially thought this was really quite an elegant solution. 🙁

I’d be interested in hearing what others think.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T00:55:59+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 12:55 am

    I usually collect calls to the OS inside an abstraction/interface so that I can easily test it.. Just as Andrew as mentioned above.

    However given only the need mentioned in the question; I feel ‘Subclass and Override’ is the simplest and least invasive way to get this done – Option 2 that the OP mentioned.

    public class DateCalculator
    {
      public DateTime GetNextExpirationDate() {  // call to GetBaseLineDate() to determine result }
      virtual protected GetBaseLineDate() {  return DateTime.Today; }
    }
    
    // in your test assembly
    public class DateCalcWithSettableBaseLine : DateCalculator
    {
      public DateTime BaseLine { get; set;}
      override protected GetBaseLineDate()
      {    return this.BaseLine;  }
    }
    
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