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Practical Test-Driven Development using C# 7

You're reading from   Practical Test-Driven Development using C# 7 Unleash the power of TDD by implementing real world examples under .NET environment and JavaScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788398787
Length 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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John Callaway John Callaway
Author Profile Icon John Callaway
John Callaway
Clayton Hunt Clayton Hunt
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Clayton Hunt
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why TDD is Important FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up the .NET Test Environment 3. Setting Up a JavaScript Environment 4. What to Know Before Getting Started 5. Tabula Rasa – Approaching an Application with TDD in Mind 6. Approaching the Problem 7. Test-Driving C# Applications 8. Abstract Away Problems 9. Testing JavaScript Applications 10. Exploring Integrations 11. Changes in Requirements 12. The Legacy Problem 13. Unraveling a Mess 14. A Better Foot Forward 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Devil's advocate


We will continue to demonstrate testing small, but already we have hit our next example. Playing devil's advocate is a useful technique in many circumstances. The way that we play devil's advocate in TDD is by imagining the simplest, and possibly most erroneous, approach to making the test pass. We want to force the test to make the code right instead of writing the code that we believe to be correct. For instance, in this case the desire is to make the test that was just written pass by adding an Items list. But the test doesn't require that at this point. It only requires that Items exists as a property on the class. There is no designation of a type in the test. So, to play devil's advocate, make the test pass by using Object as the type and setting the Items object to a simple non-null value.

internal class TodoList
{
  public object Items { get; } = new object();

  public TodoList()
  {
  }
}

Okay, now all the tests pass but that clearly isn't a proper solution. Thinking...

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