Exploration Through Example

Example-driven development, Agile testing, context-driven testing, Agile programming, Ruby, and other things of interest to Brian Marick
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Sun, 05 Oct 2003

Agile testing directions: Postscript

The last part (hurray!) of a series
The table of contents is on the right

Thus ends my essay on where agile testing is going and should go. I want to reemphasize that I fully expect I'll look back on it in five years and think "How naïve". That's always been the case in the past. Why should the future be different?

I like being wrong, as long as the wrongness is a step along a productive path. I feel that way about this essay. I feel good about the direction my work will now take me. I hope this flood of words is also useful to others.

## Posted at 09:19 in category /agile [permalink] [top]

Learning time

Via Keith Ray, something from Jim Little about continuous learning. A practical approach that I've not seen before.

## Posted at 09:19 in category /misc [permalink] [top]

About Brian Marick
I consult mainly on Agile software development, with a special focus on how testing fits in.

Contact me here: marick@exampler.com.

 

Syndication

 

Agile Testing Directions
Introduction
Tests and examples
Technology-facing programmer support
Business-facing team support
Business-facing product critiques
Technology-facing product critiques
Testers on agile projects
Postscript

Permalink to this list

 

Working your way out of the automated GUI testing tarpit
  1. Three ways of writing the same test
  2. A test should deduce its setup path
  3. Convert the suite one failure at a time
  4. You should be able to get to any page in one step
  5. Extract fast tests about single pages
  6. Link checking without clicking on links
  7. Workflow tests remain GUI tests
Permalink to this list

 

Design-Driven Test-Driven Design
Creating a test
Making it (barely) run
Views and presenters appear
Hooking up the real GUI

 

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