I personnaly tend to prefer the
If (cbkSkipCurrentTest.Checked)
End If
or
If Not(cbkSkipCurrentTest.Checked)
End If
version.
In C#, that would give
if (cbkSkipCurrentTest.Checked) {
}
and
if (!cbkSkipCurrentTest.Checked) {
}
But this could be seen as a personnal choice; as Checked property already is a boolean value, I don't see the point to compare it to true or false; just use it as is, there is nothing more you need.
Hope this helps :)