Book Image

Test-Driven Java Development, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Viktor Farcic, Alex Garcia
Book Image

Test-Driven Java Development, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Viktor Farcic, Alex Garcia

Overview of this book

Test-driven development (TDD) is a development approach that relies on a test-first procedure that emphasizes writing a test before writing the necessary code, and then refactoring the code to optimize it.The value of performing TDD with Java, one of the longest established programming languages, is to improve the productivity of programmers and the maintainability and performance of code, and develop a deeper understanding of the language and how to employ it effectively. Starting with the basics of TDD and understanding why its adoption is beneficial, this book will take you from the first steps of TDD with Java until you are confident enough to embrace the practice in your day-to-day routine.You'll be guided through setting up tools, frameworks, and the environment you need, and we will dive right into hands-on exercises with the goal of mastering one practice, tool, or framework at a time. You'll learn about the Red-Green-Refactor procedure, how to write unit tests, and how to use them as executable documentation.With this book, you'll also discover how to design simple and easily maintainable code, work with mocks, utilize behavior-driven development, refactor old legacy code, and release a half-finished feature to production with feature toggles.You will finish this book with a deep understanding of the test-driven development methodology and the confidence to apply it to application programming with Java.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
9
Refactoring Legacy Code – Making It Young Again
Index

A Feature Toggle example


Here we go with our demo application. This time, we're going to build a simple and small REpresentational State Transfer (REST)  service to compute, on demand, a concrete Nth position of Fibonacci's sequence. We will keep track of enabled/disabled features using a file. For simplicity, we will use Spring Boot as our framework of choice and Thymeleaf as a template engine. This is also included in the Spring Boot dependency. Find more information about Spring Boot and related projects at http://projects.spring.io/spring-boot/. Also, you can visit http://www.thymeleaf.org/ to read more about the template engine.

This is how the build.gradle file looks:

apply plugin: 'java' 
apply plugin: 'application' 
 
sourceCompatibility = 1.8 
version = '1.0' 
mainClassName = "com.packtpublishing.tddjava.ch09.Application" 
 
repositories { 
    mavenLocal() 
    mavenCentral() 
} 
 
dependencies { 
    compile group: 'org.springframework.boot', 
            name: 'spring-boot-starter...