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Visual Studio 2012 added a "Run tests after build" button in the Unit Test Explorer, but it seems that option is not available in the Professional edition. In fact, my "Unit Test Explorer" is just called "Test Explorer", and doesn't have that button at all:

Screenshot of Test Explorer window

Are there any extensions which can replace this missing feature? Something that integrates with the existing test explorer UI would be ideal. (Free options are also preferred, since if I could convince my corporate overlords to shell out for VS Ultimate/Premium, this wouldn't be an issue anyway)

Brant Bobby
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4 Answers4

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I remapped my F6 key to TestExplorer.RunAllTests instead of the default of Build.BuildSolution

Build.BuildSolution gets remapped to Ctrl-Shift-B when you do that.

It works well because now my F6 reflex RunAllTests saves any modified files, builds my solution and runs my unit tests.

The only thing I had to change is my window layout so that I can see the Test Explorer Window, that way I know if any tests failed.

Updating the answer with a link to a blog I wrote about this

Jason Learmouth
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The "Run Tests After Build" and "Profile Test" features are available in Premimum and Ultimate editions of Visual Studio 2012.

Oleg Sych
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9

NCrunch is not free but it's well worth the money and superior to any and all test running features in Visual Studio, regardless of edition.

Rickard
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  • I have been using nCrunch since early betas. Just recently my trial period ran out. My company is working on getting us licenses, but it's a slow process. I tried MightyMoose and Test Explorer, but neither one compares. nCrunch FTW! – Kris McGinnes Dec 04 '12 at 23:51
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    The link In this answer refers to NCrunch.com, which has apparently expired. go to NCrunch.net instead. The product is still alive and well. I used it for a couple years while it was free, and it was fantastic. If you're in a TDD environment, you won't want to develop without it. – Ken Mason Jan 29 '13 at 18:02
  • Only that [NCrunch does not yet support DNX projects](https://twitter.com/remcomulder/status/697363743668363265), which if using xunit, you're then limited to the command line ([dnx-watch](https://github.com/aspnet/dnx-watch) with [xunit](http://xunit.github.io/docs/getting-started-dnx.html) is kool tho), or the VS Test Runner – Matt Kocaj Feb 12 '16 at 05:34
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You could also have a look at http://www.continuoustests.com/ aka Mighty Moose.

It's not quite as slick as NCrunch, but it is free.

Haugholt
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