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Found 15 Skills
Detects anti-patterns and code smells in .NET test suites. Use when the user asks to review test quality, find test smells, identify flaky test indicators, or audit tests for common mistakes. Covers assertion quality, test isolation, naming, flakiness indicators, over-mocking, and structural problems. Works with MSTest, xUnit, NUnit, and TUnit.
Performs pseudo-mutation analysis on .NET production code to find gaps in existing test suites. Use when the user asks to find weak tests, discover untested edge cases, check if tests would catch a bug, or evaluate test effectiveness through mutation-style reasoning. Analyzes production code for mutation points (boundary conditions, boolean flips, null returns, exception removal, arithmetic changes) and checks whether existing tests would detect each mutation. Works with MSTest, xUnit, NUnit, and TUnit. DO NOT USE FOR: writing new tests (use writing-mstest-tests), detecting test anti-patterns (use test-anti-patterns), measuring assertion diversity (use assertion-quality), or running actual mutation testing tools.
A specialized skill for test naming conventions and best practices. Use this when you need to name test methods, improve test readability, or establish naming standards. It covers three-part naming method, Chinese naming recommendations, test class naming, etc. Keywords: test naming, test naming, naming conventions, naming conventions, three-part naming, three-part naming, method_scenario_expected, method_scenario_expected, how to name tests, test readability, test readability, naming best practices, test reports, test documentation