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It exists the technology of mutation testing. It checks, if the tests are running even if you change the code. If not all is OK, if the tests are running they don't cover all eventualities. There is some theoretical work about it, but I'm interested in the question, if it is useful in practice? Do you have any examples of real life applications of mutation testing? Does it work better than simple test-coverage-tools? Or is it useless?

What are the advantages/disadvantages of mutation testing in the real world?

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I do not understand how this deviates from traditional test driven development. There's simply no way to cover all mathematical eventualities, and I don't think that's it's even worth it. – Jon Limjap Oct 28 '08 at 9:31
Yeah, that's my question if it is worth the effort in the real world. I know there is some theoretical work about it. But does it work in reality? – Mnementh Oct 28 '08 at 9:35
Is the point not that mutation testing actually tests the tests? I mean, if you can alter the source code's logic and still pass the tests then surely the tests aren't quite right? Forgive me if I'm missing something... – Grundlefleck Oct 28 '08 at 10:20
Yes, mutation testing like code-coverage check if your tests are sufficient. – Mnementh Oct 28 '08 at 10:29

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I looked at mutation test some time ago as a method for checking the efficacy of my automated regession testing scripts. Basically, a number of these scripts had missing checkpoints, so while they were exercising the application being tested correctly, they weren't verifying the results against the baseline data. I found that a far simpler method than changing the code was to write another application to introduce modifications to a copy of the baseline, and re-run the tests against the modified baseline. In this scenario, any test that passed was either faulty or incomplete.

This is not genuine mutation testing, but a method that uses a similar paradigm to test the efficacy of test scripts. It is simple enough to implement, and IMO does a good job.

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