Book Image

.Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central

By : Luc van Vugt
Book Image

.Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central

By: Luc van Vugt

Overview of this book

Dynamics 365 Business Central is the new cloud-based SaaS ERP proposition from Microsoft. It’s not as simple as it used to be way back when it was called Navigator, Navision Financials, or Microsoft Business Solutions-Navision. Our development practices are becoming more formal, and with this, the call for test automation is pressing on us. This book will teach you to leverage testing tools available with Dynamics 365 Business Central to perform automated testing. We’ll begin with a quick introduction to automated testing, followed by an overview of test automation in Dynamics 365 Business Central. Then you’ll learn to design and build automated tests and we’ll go through some efficient methods to get from requirements to application and testing code. Lastly, you’ll learn to incorporate your own and Microsoft tests into your daily development practice. By the end of the book, you’ll be able to write your own automated tests for Dynamics 365 Business Central.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Automated Testing - A General Overview
3
Section 2: Automated Testing in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central
6
Section 3: Designing and Building Automated Tests for Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central
11
Section 4: Integrating Automated Tests in Your Daily Development Practice

TDD and our test examples

What if we applied TDD to our test examples in Section 3, Designing and Building Automated Tests for Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central?

To be honest, it wouldn't have looked much different, as a lot of the TDD principles were implicitly exercised as follows:

  • By defining our customer wishes by means of the ATDD scenarios, we created ourselves a sufficient set of tests, that is, a test list
  • By implementing our tests with the four steps recipe, we did the following:
    1. We took small steps
    2. We created a structure for each test based on the GIVEN-WHEN-THEN tags
    3. We constructed the real code to get it to work
    4. We ran the test, and if red, we adjusted the code till the test passed, that is green
  • And even though not worked out in the test examples as such, as discussed at the end of Chapter 7, From Customer Wish to Test Automation - And Some More, I...