You are correct that you cannot access the event delegates from outside the class, this is a limitation within the C# language.
The most straight-forward approach to test this, would be to mock class B and then raise it's event and then observe the side-effects of the event being raised. This is slightly different than what you're looking for but it demonstrates class's A behavior rather than its implementation (this is what your tests should strive to do).
In order for this to work, class B must be mockable and the event that it exposes must also be virtual. Moq can't intercept events if they're not declared as virtual. Alternatively, if B is an interface be sure that the event is declared there.
public interface IEventProvider
{
event EventHandler OnEvent;
}
public class Example
{
public Example(IEventProvider e)
{
e.OnEvent += PerformWork;
}
private void PerformWork(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
// perform work
// event has an impact on this class that can be observed
// from the outside. this is just an example...
VisibleSideEffect = true;
}
public bool VisibleSideEffect
{
get; set;
}
}
[TestClass]
public class ExampleFixture
{
[TestMethod]
public void DemonstrateThatTheClassRespondsToEvents()
{
var eventProvider = new Mock<IEventProvider>().Object;
var subject = new Example(eventProvider.Object);
Mock.Get(eventProvider)
.Raise( e => e.OnEvent += null, EventArgs.Empty);
Assert.IsTrue( subject.VisibleSideEffect,
"the visible side effect of the event was not raised.");
}
}
If you really need to test the implementation, there are other mechanisms available, such as a hand-rolled Test Spy / Test Double, or reflection-based strategy to get the delegate list. My hope is that you should be more concerned with class A's event handling logic than its event handler assignment. After all, if class A doesn't respond to the event and do something with it, the assignment shouldn't matter.