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Clean Code in JavaScript

You're reading from   Clean Code in JavaScript Develop reliable, maintainable, and robust JavaScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789957648
Length 548 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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James Padolsey James Padolsey
Author Profile Icon James Padolsey
James Padolsey
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: What is Clean Code Anyway?
2. Setting the Scene FREE CHAPTER 3. The Tenets of Clean Code 4. The Enemies of Clean Code 5. SOLID and Other Principles 6. Naming Things Is Hard 7. Section 2: JavaScript and Its Bits
8. Primitive and Built-In Types 9. Dynamic Typing 10. Operators 11. Parts of Syntax and Scope 12. Control Flow 13. Section 3: Crafting Abstractions
14. Design Patterns 15. Real-World Challenges 16. Section 4: Testing and Tooling
17. The Landscape of Testing 18. Writing Clean Tests 19. Tools for Cleaner Code 20. Section 5: Collaboration and Making Changes
21. Documenting Your Code 22. Other Peoples' Code 23. Communication and Advocacy 24. Case Study 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Testing the right thing

One of the most important considerations when writing any test, whether a granular unit test or a far-reaching E2E test, is the question of what to test. It's entirely possible to test the wrong thing; doing so can give us false confidence in our code. We may write a huge test suite and walk away grinning, thinking that our code now fulfills all expectations and is utterly fault-tolerant. But our test suite may not test the things we think it does. Perhaps it only tests a few narrow use cases, leaving us exposed to many possibilities of breakage. Or perhaps it conducts tests in a way that is never emulated in reality, leading to a situation where our tests don't protect us from failures in production. To protect us against these possibilities, we must understand what we truly wish to test.

Consider a function that we've written to extract...

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