Book Image

Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central - Second Edition

Book Image

Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central - Second Edition

Overview of this book

Dynamics 365 Business Central is a cloud-based SaaS ERP proposition from Microsoft. With development practices becoming more formal, implementing changes or new features is not as simple as it used to be back when Dynamics 365 Business Central was called Navigator, Navision Financials, or Microsoft Business Solutions-Navision, and the call for test automation is increasing. This book will show you how to leverage the testing tools available in Dynamics 365 Business Central to perform automated testing. Starting with a quick introduction to automated testing and test-driven development (TDD), you'll get an overview of test automation in Dynamics 365 Business Central. You'll then learn how to design and build automated tests and explore methods to progress from requirements to application and testing code. Next, you'll find out how you can incorporate your own as well as Microsoft tests into your development practice. With the addition of three new chapters, this second edition covers in detail how to construct complex scenarios, write testable code, and test processes with incoming and outgoing calls. By the end of this book, you'll be able to write your own automated tests for Microsoft Business Central.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Automated Testing – A General Overview
4
Section 2:Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central
7
Section 3:Designing and Building Automated Tests for Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central
12
Section 4:Integrating Automated Tests in Your Daily Development Practice
15
Section 5:Advanced Topics
19
Section 6:Appendix

No plan, no test

Goal: Understand why tests should be planned, and designed, before they are coded and executed.

I guess I am not far off when saying that most of the application testing done in our world falls under the term of exploratory testing or ad-hoc testing. That is: testing done manually by experienced persons that know the application under test and have a good understanding and feeling of how to break the thing. But this is most often exercised with no explicit design and no reproducible, shareable, and reusable scripts. In this world, we typically don't want developers to test their own code as they, consciously or unconsciously, know how to use the software and evade issues. Their mindset is how to make it (work), not how to break it.

With automated tests, it will be developers that will code them. And more often than not, it will be the same developers that do the application coding. So, they need a design of what tests to code. Tests that will cover a broad...