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Pragmatic Test-Driven Development in C# and .NET

You're reading from   Pragmatic Test-Driven Development in C# and .NET Write loosely coupled, documented, and high-quality code with DDD using familiar tools and libraries

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803230191
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Adam Tibi Adam Tibi
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Adam Tibi
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Getting Started and the Basics of TDD
2. Chapter 1: Writing Your First TDD Implementation FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Dependency Injection by Example 4. Chapter 3: Getting Started with Unit Testing 5. Chapter 4: Real Unit Testing with Test Doubles 6. Chapter 5: Test-Driven Development Explained 7. Chapter 6: The FIRSTHAND Guidelines of TDD 8. Part 2: Building an Application with TDD
9. Chapter 7: A Pragmatic View of Domain-Driven Design 10. Chapter 8: Designing an Appointment Booking App 11. Chapter 9: Building an Appointment Booking App with Entity Framework and Relational DB 12. Chapter 10: Building an App with Repositories and Document DB 13. Part 3: Applying TDD to Your Projects
14. Chapter 11: Implementing Continuous Integration with GitHub Actions 15. Chapter 12: Dealing with Brownfield Projects 16. Chapter 13: The Intricacies of Rolling Out TDD 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix 1: Commonly Used Libraries with Unit Tests 1. Appendix 2: Advanced Mocking Scenarios

The Thoroughness guideline

When unit testing some naturally occurring questions are as follows:

  • How many tests are enough?
  • Do we have a test coverage metric?
  • Should we test third-party components?
  • What system components should we unit test and what should we leave?

The Thoroughness guideline attempts to set the answers to these questions.

Unit tests for dependency testing

When you encounter a dependency, whether this dependency is part of your system or a third-party dependency, you create a test double for it and isolate it in order to test your SUT.

In unit tests, you do not directly call a third-party dependency; otherwise, your code will be an integration test and with that, you lose all the benefits of unit tests. For example, in unit tests, you do not call this:

_someZipLibrary.Zip(fileSource, fileDestination);

For testing this, you create a test double for the .zip library to avoid calling the real thing.

This is an area that unit...

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