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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Fri, 26 Aug 2005

Logging and children

A program should be able to answer the two questions parents so often ask young children:

  • All right, which of you [subsystems] did it?

  • What on earth were you thinking?
    (What chain of events led to the wrong action? What relevant "facts" were believed at that moment?)

Logging is an important tool toward that end. I think it's underused and too often misused. I wrote some patterns for using logging for PLoP 2000 (pdf). Pretty mediocre. Who's written what I should have?

The TextTest people advocate using logging to capture the expected results of a business-facing test. I like when idea working on ugly legacy code.

## Posted at 08:57 in category /coding [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.

 

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Agile Testing Directions
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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
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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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