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Is there hard evidence of the ROI of unit testing?

I read a lot about unit tests pros and cons and it always degenerates into some type of flame war that goes like this:

Unit test hater: Unit tests are a waste of time and don't actually fix bugs.

Unit test lover: You don't know what you are talking about unit tests make you program faster.

Is there any studies or evidence to help support or disprove the various ideals?

No I'm not looking for what personally happened to you on your project... not some anecdote. No I want a 3rd party study from any poster that does not have a personal bias one way or another.

IT'S THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD PEOPLE!

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duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/237000/… – Mauricio Scheffer Nov 5 at 1:23
Excellent question. I know there were various studies of aspects of agile such as pair programming that demonstrated effectiveness, but I'm not sure about unit testing, probably because no two people do it the same way. – Uri Nov 5 at 1:24
To the people who shut this down: YOUR JUST AFRAID OF SCIENCE! – Mel Nov 7 at 21:19

closed as exact duplicate by Mauricio Scheffer, itowlson, Brian, OMG Ponies, Michael Todd Nov 5 at 1:36

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Yes, and you can read all about them on one of Robert C "Uncle Bob" Martin's recent blog posts:

http://blog.objectmentor.com/articles/2009/10/07/tdd-derangement-syndrome

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There are no case studies that I'm aware of that prove one way or another. The benefits are frequently difficult to measure as a lot of the benefits are over the life of the project rather than at an immediate time. The costs are more immediate, which is why you'll hear the "haters" make that statement. I won't comment one way or another so as not to start a war.

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-1 because there have been several good studies and it's quite easy to measure the benefits: # of Bugs, time to fix, time to market etc. – ryber Nov 5 at 1:30

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