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Test-Driven Development with C++

Test-Driven Development with C++

By : Abdul Wahid Tanner
4.5 (2)
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Test-Driven Development with C++

Test-Driven Development with C++

4.5 (2)
By: Abdul Wahid Tanner

Overview of this book

Modern, standard C++ is all that is needed to create a small and practical testing framework that will improve the design of any project. This allows you to think about how the code will be used, which is the first step in designing intuitive interfaces. TDD is a modern balanced software development approach that helps to create maintainable applications, provide modularity in design, and write minimal code that drastically reduces defects. With the help of this book, you'll be able to continue adding value when designs need to change by ensuring that the changes don't break existing tests. In this book, you will use test-driven development (TDD) to gain practical skills by writing a simple testing framework and then using it to drive the design of a logging library. The book will help you enhance your software development skills with test cases. You'll understand how to design and implement test cases. The chapters will also show you how to utilize the TDD approach to be more productive in software development than attempting to code in large unstructured steps. By the end of this book, you'll have gained knowledge of TDD and testing and also built a working logging library with unique features not found in other libraries.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Testing MVP
10
Part 2: Using TDD to Create a Logging Library
14
Part 3: Extending the TDD Library to Support the Growing Needs of the Logging Library

Adding More Confirm Types

The previous chapter introduced confirmations and showed you how to use them to verify that the bool values within your tests match what you expect them to be. The chapter did this with some exploratory code based on a school grading example. We’re going to change the grading example to better fit with a test library and add additional types that you will be able to use in your confirms.

In this chapter, we will cover the following main topics:

  • Fixing the bool confirms
  • Confirming equality
  • Changing the code to fix a problem that line numbers are causing with test failures
  • Adding more confirm types
  • Confirming string literals
  • Confirming floating-point values
  • How to write confirms

The additional types add some new twists to confirms that, in this chapter, you’ll learn how to work around. By the end of this chapter, you’ll be able to write tests that can verify any result you need to be tested.

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Test-Driven Development with C++
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