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Let's Make Testing Fun Again

Benjamin Oakes edited this page Sep 6, 2012 · 21 revisions

From WindyCityRails 2012

Presenter: Noel Rappin

Abstract

“Programmers Love Writing Tests” is the subtitle of one of Kent Beck’s first articles about Test-Driven Development. I don’t think I’m alone in being drawn to TDD at first because it was fun. The quick and consistent feedback and the ability to turn complicated problems into a series of smaller problems to be solved made TDD development seem more like a game than work.

Eventually TDD became less fun. Slow tests made running test suites a cruel joke. Test code gets bulky, and is hard to refactor because, of course, tests don’t have their own tests.

Let’s fix that. We’ll show some notorious testing joy-killers, like slow tests, hard to read tests, tests that paper over bad designs rather than driving new ones. And we’ll squash them, and regain testing delight.

Summary

  • Testing best practices

Memorable Quotes

  • "Correctness is a side effect" - Kent Beck

Notes

From @benjaminoakes:

  • Kent Beck: "Programmers Love Writing Tests"
  • Noel liked doing JUnit, etc
  • We get satisfaction from solving problems well, but do we love writing tests?
    • Do we just love saying we wrote tests?

What makes testing nice:

  • Feedback: learn something about your code
  • Communication (longer term)

Good Rspec Habits:

  • Name by behavior
  • Take small steps
  • Test one thing at a time; good when your business logic changes
  • Don't make too many objects (e.g. make 100 to make sure #101 acts differently)
    • Slow
    • Find ways to make just enough objects
  • Remove noise
    • Complicated setup? Maybe your code is too complicated to begin with
  • Don't use Cucumber for unit tests

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