We're working on a project here in Visual Studio 2008. We're using the built-in testing suite provided with it (the Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting namespace). It turns out, that much to our chagrin, a great deal of complexity (and therefore errors) have wound up coded into our UI layer. While our unit tests do a decent job of covering our business layer, our UI layer is a constant source of irritation. We'd ideally like to unit-test that, as well. Does anyone know of a good "Microsoft-compatible" way of doing that in visual studio? Will it introduce some sort of conflict to 'mix' unit testing frameworks like nUnitForms with the Microsoft stuff? Are there any obvious bear traps I should be aware of with unit-testing forms?
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You would need to refactor the UI so that UI does not need any unit testing. UI should contain minimum or no business logic. There are many patterns that deal with this issue. Martin Fowler has a very good article that explains a lot about these patterns: http://martinfowler.com/eaaDev/uiArchs.html There is a small chapter in the Refactoring book by Martin Fowler that talks about refactoring the non testable UI. You could also read Working Effectively With Legacy Code. Note: There are tool that could be used to automate the UI testing. SilkTest comes to my mind. But I would not use them if possible. |
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I use the Passive View architecture as detailed here http://martinfowler.com/eaaDev/PassiveScreen.html Basically move all your code in the forms to a separate class called the xxxUI. The form then implements a IxxxUI interface and expose anything that the xxxUI class needs. You can probably simplify things and aggregate dealing with several controls into one method. The flow then goes The USER click on a button. The button calls a method on the corresponding UI class. Passing any needed parameters. The UI Class method modifies the model. Then using the interface updates the UI. For unit testing you have test or dummy classes implement the interfaces and register themselves with the UI Classes. You can have these test classes fire any type of input and respond accordingly. Typically I have sequence lists that do thing in a precise order. (Tap A, click this, scroll that, then Type B, etc). |
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Check out Jeremy D. Miller's WIP Presentation Patterns wiki page for refactoring inspiration :) Miller is writing a book, and it looks like it's going to be a must-have for this sort of thing. |
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