Karl Seguin blogged a short nice post on the "7 phases of unit testing". I'll take the jump and see how they fit into my life.
1 - Refuse to unit test because "you don't have enough time"
It wasn't exactly like that - I convinced my manager, it would be better to concentrate on "real code". Don't want to waste precious development time.
2 - Start unit testing and immediately start blogging about unit testing and TDD and how great they are and how everyone should do it
It wasn't exactly like that - First, I didn't have a blog then. I did, however, talked about it to anybody who was willing to listen. Or just pass by. And talking was mostly about theory. I did experiment, but only later I would integrated it on real production code.
3 - Unit test everything - make private methods internal and abuse the InternalsVisibleTo attribute. Test getters and setters or else you won't get 100% code coverage
It wasn't exactly like that - I made them public! What's the difference? And of course, if you start doing TDD, it's easiest to start with properties. The coverage thing is just a trophy, right?
4 - Get fed up with how brittle your unit tests are and start writing integration tests without realizing it.
It wasn't exactly like that - Brittle tests mean one thing: they're good for the writing phase, not for maintenance. And integration test are just as brittle. Better have QA test them.
5 - Discover a mocking framework and make heavy use of strict semantics
It wasn't exactly like that - After doing hand-rolled mocks, I started reading about dynamic mocking frameworks. And decided, it's just one more tool to learn and teach. I'll be better off writing my own mocks.
6 - Mock absolutely everything that can possibly be mocked
It wasn't exactly like that - well, because I chose the manual way, I didn't have enough patience to mock everything, just what's "important" or "easy" or "I know how it works".
7 - Start writing effective unit tests
Eventually, it did happen. But it's a long road, and I'm enjoying it.
There you go. I don't look that smart now, do I? Let that be a lesson to you - if you can benefit from other people's experience, do it. Your (and my) way may not be the best and shortest to success,






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