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Crafting Test-Driven Software with Python

You're reading from   Crafting Test-Driven Software with Python Write test suites that scale with your applications' needs and complexity using Python and PyTest

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838642655
Length 338 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alessandro Molina Alessandro Molina
Author Profile Icon Alessandro Molina
Alessandro Molina
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Software Testing and Test-Driven Development
2. Getting Started with Software Testing FREE CHAPTER 3. Test Doubles with a Chat Application 4. Test-Driven Development while Creating a TODO List 5. Scaling the Test Suite 6. Section 2: PyTest for Python Testing
7. Introduction to PyTest 8. Dynamic and Parametric Tests and Fixtures 9. Fitness Function with a Contact Book Application 10. PyTest Essential Plugins 11. Managing Test Environments with Tox 12. Testing Documentation and Property-Based Testing 13. Section 3: Testing for the Web
14. Testing for the Web: WSGI versus HTTP 15. End-to-End Testing with the Robot Framework 16. About Packt 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using dummy objects

A dummy is an object that does nothing. It just serves the purpose of being passed around as an argument and not making the code crash because we lack an object. But its implementation is totally empty; it does nothing.

In our chat application, we need a connection object to be able to send messages from one client to the other. We have not yet implemented that connection object, and for now, we are focused on having the ChatClient.send_message test pass, but how can we make it pass if we don't yet have a working Connection object the client relies on?

That's where dummy objects come in handy. They replace other objects, faking that they can do their job, but in reality, they do absolutely nothing.

A dummy object for our Connection class would currently look like this:

class _DummyConnection:
def broadcast(*args, **kwargs):
pass

In practice, it's an object that provides a broadcast method but does absolutely nothing. Dummy objects are just...

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