Book Image

Agile Technical Practices Distilled

By : Pedro M. Santos, Marco Consolaro, Alessandro Di Gioia
Book Image

Agile Technical Practices Distilled

By: Pedro M. Santos, Marco Consolaro, Alessandro Di Gioia

Overview of this book

The number of popular technical practices has grown exponentially in the last few years. Learning the common fundamental software development practices can help you become a better programmer. This book uses the term Agile as a wide umbrella and covers Agile principles and practices, as well as most methodologies associated with it. You’ll begin by discovering how driver-navigator, chess clock, and other techniques used in the pair programming approach introduce discipline while writing code. You’ll then learn to safely change the design of your code using refactoring. While learning these techniques, you’ll also explore various best practices to write efficient tests. The concluding chapters of the book delve deep into the SOLID principles - the five design principles that you can use to make your software more understandable, flexible and maintainable. By the end of the book, you will have discovered new ideas for improving your software design skills, the relationship within your team, and the way your business works.
Table of Contents (31 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1
7
Section 2
13
Section 3
19
Section 4
25
Chapter 21
28
License: CyberDojo

Chapter 8

Test Doubles

Functions that change state should not return values and functions that return values should not change state.

– Bertrand Meyer, Object-Oriented Software Construction

I still remember when I joined the first hardcore XP team. It was still experimental at that company, and we didn't have the funds for tools in the beginning, aside from an IDE refactoring helper. We couldn't introduce frameworks without a bureaucratic request – a troublesome authorization process lasting weeks. Nevertheless, our backlog needed to be delivered in time. That's where I had to learn to inject dependencies manually and to manually develop all test doubles. We called it "poor man dependency injection" and "poor man mocking," underscoring the fact that we were forced to re-invent the wheel for budgetary reasons.

Despite that little drag, we succeeded in delivering the backlog in time and with very few bugs. The company...