Professional Test Driven Development with C#: Developing Real World Applications with TDD by James Bender, Jeff McWherter

Professional Test Driven Development with C#: Developing Real World Applications with TDD



Download Professional Test Driven Development with C#: Developing Real World Applications with TDD




Professional Test Driven Development with C#: Developing Real World Applications with TDD James Bender, Jeff McWherter ebook
Page: 361
Publisher: Wrox
ISBN: 047064320X, 9780470643204
Format: pdf


That is because TDD is not applicable in most cases in the real world. You create one test based on one fraction of one requirement. NET MVC 4 application using TDD (Test Driven Development) and Moq. Right then and there I saw it: Microsoft's attitude about test driven development has been totally wrong, precisely because they were asking the worst possible person about it. Test Driven Development is about very small iterations. NET professionals published once every two months. Then you implement the code to pass that test. NET column: I'm going to talk about a feature of Visual Studio 2012 (which you're probably not using yet) and, furthermore, a feature only available in the Ultimate edition (and you'll probably be using the Professional edition). You don't define all your tests up front. This month's edition features hot topics like ASP.NET MVC4, SignalR, Knockout.js, jsRender, TDD, Visual Studio ALM, HTML5, SharePoint, Windows Azure and Metro Applications amongst others. NET project template for VS 2012 available yet, I'm going to skip this step and add a standard C# class library for the Unit Tests project. But it's It's no secret that I'm a big fan of Test-Driven Development (TDD). The big If your tests are driven by your data, and your data keeps changing, how do you to ensure that you get the "right" answer in your automated tests? Whittaker Unfortunately, treating TDD as a luxury feature gives the impression to hobby and professional software developers alike that test driven design is nothing but a bell and a whistle in Visual Studio -- which it is not.