Book Image

Scala Test-Driven Development

By : Gaurav Sood
Book Image

Scala Test-Driven Development

By: Gaurav Sood

Overview of this book

Test-driven development (TDD) produces high-quality applications in less time than is possible with traditional methods. Due to the systematic nature of TDD, the application is tested in individual units as well as cumulatively, right from the design stage, to ensure optimum performance and reduced debugging costs. This step-by-step guide shows you how to use the principles of TDD and built-in Scala testing modules to write clean and fully tested Scala code and give your workflow the change it needs to let you create better applications than ever before. After an introduction to TDD, you will learn the basics of ScalaTest, one of the most flexible and most popular testing tools around for Scala, by building your first fully test-driven application. Building on from that you will learn about the ScalaTest API and how to refactor code to produce high-quality applications. We’ll teach you the concepts of BDD (Behavior-driven development) and you’ll see how to add functional tests to the existing suite of tests. You’ll be introduced to the concepts of Mocks and Stubs and will learn to increase test coverage using properties. With a concluding chapter on miscellaneous tools, this book will enable you to write better quality code that is easily maintainable and watch your apps change for the better.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Scala Test-Driven Development
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Testing frameworks


A testing framework is used for the automated testing of software. It is primarily a collection of postulations, perceptions, and observations which support automated testing of application code. Testing frameworks are not limited to just unit testing, they can very well be used for integration, smoke, and acceptance testing. There are two main frameworks for testing application code written in Scala: ScalaTest and Specs2. Both are equally easy to use and the choice of one over the other will depend on your testing approach. For example, ScalaTest uses the JUnit like testing structure, whereas the Specs2 test by itself is not prosaic but cleaves more closely to an immutability ideal.

ScalaTest is arguably more popular as it makes a transition from JUnit easier. For this reason, we will start with ScalaTest and in later chapters we will compare them both.