.. index:: single: Cookbook; Class Constants Class Constants =============== When creating a test double for a class, Mockery does not create stubs out of any class constants defined in the class we are mocking. Sometimes though, the non-existence of these class constants, setup of the test, and the application code itself, it can lead to undesired behavior, and even a PHP error: ``PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Undefined class constant 'FOO' in ...`` While supporting class constants in Mockery would be possible, it does require an awful lot of work, for a small number of use cases. Named Mocks ----------- We can, however, deal with these constants in a way supported by Mockery - by using :ref:`creating-test-doubles-named-mocks`. A named mock is a test double that has a name of the class we want to mock, but under it is a stubbed out class that mimics the real class with canned responses. Lets look at the following made up, but not impossible scenario: .. code-block:: php class Fetcher { const SUCCESS = 0; const FAILURE = 1; public static function fetch() { // Fetcher gets something for us from somewhere... return self::SUCCESS; } } class MyClass { public function doFetching() { $response = Fetcher::fetch(); if ($response == Fetcher::SUCCESS) { echo "Thanks!" . PHP_EOL; } else { echo "Try again!" . PHP_EOL; } } } Our ``MyClass`` calls a ``Fetcher`` that fetches some resource from somewhere - maybe it downloads a file from a remote web service. Our ``MyClass`` prints out a response message depending on the response from the ``Fetcher::fetch()`` call. When testing ``MyClass`` we don't really want ``Fetcher`` to go and download random stuff from the internet every time we run our test suite. So we mock it out: .. code-block:: php // Using alias: because fetch is called statically! \Mockery::mock('alias:Fetcher') ->shouldReceive('fetch') ->andReturn(0); $myClass = new MyClass(); $myClass->doFetching(); If we run this, our test will error out with a nasty ``PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Undefined class constant 'SUCCESS' in ..``. Here's how a ``namedMock()`` can help us in a situation like this. We create a stub for the ``Fetcher`` class, stubbing out the class constants, and then use ``namedMock()`` to create a mock named ``Fetcher`` based on our stub: .. code-block:: php class FetcherStub { const SUCCESS = 0; const FAILURE = 1; } \Mockery::namedMock('Fetcher', 'FetcherStub') ->shouldReceive('fetch') ->andReturn(0); $myClass = new MyClass(); $myClass->doFetching(); This works because under the hood, Mockery creates a class called ``Fetcher`` that extends ``FetcherStub``. The same approach will work even if ``Fetcher::fetch()`` is not a static dependency: .. code-block:: php class Fetcher { const SUCCESS = 0; const FAILURE = 1; public function fetch() { // Fetcher gets something for us from somewhere... return self::SUCCESS; } } class MyClass { public function doFetching($fetcher) { $response = $fetcher->fetch(); if ($response == Fetcher::SUCCESS) { echo "Thanks!" . PHP_EOL; } else { echo "Try again!" . PHP_EOL; } } } And the test will have something like this: .. code-block:: php class FetcherStub { const SUCCESS = 0; const FAILURE = 1; } $mock = \Mockery::mock('Fetcher', 'FetcherStub') $mock->shouldReceive('fetch') ->andReturn(0); $myClass = new MyClass(); $myClass->doFetching($mock); Constants Map ------------- Another way of mocking class constants can be with the use of the constants map configuration. Given a class with constants: .. code-block:: php class Fetcher { const SUCCESS = 0; const FAILURE = 1; public function fetch() { // Fetcher gets something for us from somewhere... return self::SUCCESS; } } It can be mocked with: .. code-block:: php \Mockery::getConfiguration()->setConstantsMap([ 'Fetcher' => [ 'SUCCESS' => 'success', 'FAILURE' => 'fail', ] ]); $mock = \Mockery::mock('Fetcher'); var_dump($mock::SUCCESS); // (string) 'success' var_dump($mock::FAILURE); // (string) 'fail'