This link has been bookmarked by 95 people . It was first bookmarked on 31 Jul 2006, by someone privately.
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you will quickly find that only a fraction of the tests you can imagine are actually useful.
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You want to write tests that will pay you back with information.
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gavino ang1. case, 2. define how to run a test suite. JUnit supports two ways of running single tests: * static * dynamic In the static way you override the runTest method inherited from TestCase and call the desired test case. A convenient way to do this is with a
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Marco Martins CostaTesting is not closely integrated with development. This prevents you from measuring the progress of development- you can't tell when something starts working or when something stops working. Using JUnit you can cheaply and incrementally build a test suit
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Since JUnit 2.0 there is an even simpler dynamic way. You only pass the class with the tests to a TestSuite and it extracts the test methods automatically.
public static Test suite() {
return new TestSuite(MoneyTest.class);
}
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Ivana VasiljTesting is not closely integrated with development. This prevents you from measuring the progress of development- you can't tell when something starts working or when something stops working. Using JUnit you can cheaply and incrementally build a test suit
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auxonne auxonneTesting is not closely integrated with development. This prevents you from measuring the progress of development- you can't tell when something starts working or when something stops working. Using JUnit you can cheaply and incrementally build a test suit
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Christian LongUsing JUnit you can cheaply and incrementally build a test suite that will help you measure your progress, spot unintended side effects, and focus your development efforts
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11 Oct 04
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