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Test-Driven Development with Java

You're reading from   Test-Driven Development with Java Create higher-quality software by writing tests first with SOLID and hexagonal architecture

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803236230
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Alan Mellor Alan Mellor
Author Profile Icon Alan Mellor
Alan Mellor
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: How We Got to TDD
2. Chapter 1: Building the Case for TDD FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Using TDD to Create Good Code 4. Chapter 3: Dispelling Common Myths about TDD 5. Part 2: TDD Techniques
6. Chapter 4: Building an Application Using TDD 7. Chapter 5: Writing Our First Test 8. Chapter 6: Following the Rhythms of TDD 9. Chapter 7: Driving Design – TDD and SOLID 10. Chapter 8: Test Doubles – Stubs and Mocks 11. Chapter 9: Hexagonal Architecture –Decoupling External Systems 12. Chapter 10: FIRST Tests and the Test Pyramid 13. Chapter 11: Exploring TDD with Quality Assurance 14. Chapter 12: Test First, Test Later, Test Never 15. Part 3: Real-World TDD
16. Chapter 13: Driving the Domain Layer 17. Chapter 14: Driving the Database Layer 18. Chapter 15: Driving the Web Layer 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

LSP – swappable objects

Turing Award winner Barbara Liskov is the creator of a rule concerning inheritance that is now commonly known as LSP. It was brought about by a question in OOP: if we can extend a class and use it in place of the class we extended, how can we be sure the new class will not break things?

We’ve seen in the previous section on DIP how we can use any class that implements an interface in place of the interface itself. We also saw how those classes can provide any implementation they like for that method. The interface itself provides no guarantees at all about what might lurk inside that implementation code.

There is, of course, a bad side to this—which LSP aims to avoid. Let’s explain this by looking at a counter-example in code. Suppose we made a new class that implemented interface Shape, such as this one (Warning: Do NOT run the code that follows in the MaliciousShape class!):

public class MaliciousShape implements Shape...
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