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Test-Driven Development with Java

Test-Driven Development with Java

By : Alan Mellor
4.8 (5)
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Test-Driven Development with Java

Test-Driven Development with Java

4.8 (5)
By: Alan Mellor

Overview of this book

Test-driven development enables developers to craft well-designed code and prevent defects. It’s a simple yet powerful tool that helps you focus on your code design, while automatically checking that your code works correctly. Mastering TDD will enable you to effectively utilize design patterns and become a proficient software architect. The book begins by explaining the basics of good code and bad code, bursting common myths, and why Test-driven development is crucial. You’ll then gradually move toward building a sample application using TDD, where you’ll apply the two key rhythms -- red, green, refactor and arrange, act, assert. Next, you’ll learn how to bring external systems such as databases under control by using dependency inversion and test doubles. As you advance, you’ll delve into advanced design techniques such as SOLID patterns, refactoring, and hexagonal architecture. You’ll also balance your use of fast, repeatable unit tests against integration tests using the test pyramid as a guide. The concluding chapters will show you how to implement TDD in real-world use cases and scenarios and develop a modern REST microservice backed by a Postgres database in Java 17. By the end of this book, you’ll be thinking differently about how you design code for simplicity and how correctness can be baked in as you go.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Part 1: How We Got to TDD
5
Part 2: TDD Techniques
15
Part 3: Real-World TDD

Why external systems are difficult

In this section, we’re going to review the driving force behind the hexagonal architecture approach – the difficulty of working with external systems. Dependencies on external systems cause problems in development. The solution leads to a nice design approach.

Let’s look at a simple way of handling external systems. The task of our user is to pull a report of this month’s sales from a database. We will write one piece of code that does exactly that. The software design looks like this:

Figure 9.1 – One piece of code does everything

Figure 9.1 – One piece of code does everything

In this design, we have sales data stored in a database in the usual way. We write some code to pull the report on behalf of our user. It is a single piece of code that does the whole job as a single step. It will connect to the database, send a query, receive the results, do some processing, and format the results ready for the user to read.

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Test-Driven Development with Java
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