What do I lose by adopting test driven design. I am not looking for the positives, only the negatives.
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Several downsides (and I'm not claiming there are no benefits - especially when writing the foundation of a project - it'd save a lot of time at the end):
My 2 cents on the matter |
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You lose the ability to say you are "done" before testing all your code. You lose the capability to write hundreds or thousands of lines of code before running it. You lose the opportunity to learn through debugging. You lose the flexibility to ship code that you aren't sure of. You lose the freedom to tightly couple your modules. You lose option to skip writing low level design documentation. You lose the stability that comes with code that everyone is afraid to change. You lose the title of "hacker". |
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Good answers all. I would add a few ways to avoid the dark side of TDD:
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In the few years that I've been practicing Test Driven Development, I'd have to say the biggest downsides are: Selling it to management
Selling it to other developers
Maintaining the test code along with your production code
Writing tests so that you cover everything (100% code coverage)
However, with that I'd say that the benefits of TDD far outweigh the negatives for the simple idea that if you can achieve a good set of tests that cover your application but aren't so fragile that one change breaks them all, you will be able to keep adding new features on day 300 of your project as you did on day 1. This doesn't happen with all those who try TDD thinking it's a magic bullet to all their bug-ridden code, and so they think it can't work, period. Personally I have found that with TDD, I write simpler code, I spend less time debating if a particular code solution will work or not, and that I have no fear to change any line of code that doesn't meet the criteria set forth by the team. TDD is a tough discipline to master, and I've been at it for a few years, and I still learn new testing techniques all the time. It is a huge time investment up front, but, over the long term, your sustainability will be much greater than if you had no automated unit tests. Now, if only my bosses could figure this out. |
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The person who taught my team agile development didn't believe in planning, you only wrote as much for the tiniest requirement. His motto was refactor, refactor, refactor. I came to understand that refactor meant 'not planning ahead'. |
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The biggest problem are the people who don't know how to write proper unit tests. They write tests that depend on each other (and they work great running with Ant, but then all of sudden fail when I run them from Eclipse, just because they run in different order). They write tests that don't test anything in particular - they just debug the code, check the result, and change it into test, calling it "test1". They widen the scope of classes and methods, just because it will be easier to write unit tests for them. The code of unit tests is terrible, with all the classical programming problems (heavy coupling, methods that are 500 lines long, hard-coded values, code duplication) and is a hell to maintain. For some strange reason people treat unit tests as something inferior to the "real" code, and they don't care about their quality at all. :-( |
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You have to make sure your tests are always up to date, the moment you start ignoring red lights is the moment the tests become meaningless. You also have to make sure the tests are comprehensive, or the moment a big bug appears, the stuffy management type you finally convinced to let you spend time writing more code will complain. |
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It takes some time to get into it and some time to start doing it in a project but... I always regret not doing a Test Driven approach when I find silly bugs that an automated test could have found very fast. In addition, TDD improves code quality. |
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The biggest downside is that if you really want to do TDD properly you will have to fail a lot before you succeed. Given how many software companies work (dollar per KLOC) you will eventually get fired. Even if your code is faster, cleaner, easier to maintain, and has less bugs. If you are working in a company that pays you by the KLOCs (or requirements implemented -- even if not tested) stay away from TDD (or code reviews, or pair programming, or Continuous Integration, etc. etc. etc.). |
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On your first TDD project there are two big losses, time and personal freedom You lose time because:
You lose personal freedom because:
Hope this helps |
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see this article written by me http://muhammadadel.wordpress.com/2007/06/03/test-driven-architecture/ |
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Let me add that if you apply BDD principles to a TDD project, you can alleviate a few of the major drawbacks listed here (confusion, misunderstandings, etc.). If you're not familiar with BDD, you should read Dan North's introduction. He came up the concept in answer to some of the issues that arose from applying TDD at the workplace. Dan's intro to BDD can be found here. I only make this suggestion because BDD addresses some of these negatives and acts as a gap-stop. You'll want to consider this when collecting your feedback. |
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Having to explain to upper managment that all those green lines represent progress! |
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I've encountered several situations where TDD makes me crazy. To name some:
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Having to sack developers who aren't needed any more, because you write working code ;) |
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The downside to TDD is that it is usually tightly associated with 'Agile' methodology, which places no importance on documentation of a system, rather the understanding behind why a test 'should' return one specific value rather than any other resides only in the developer's head. As soon as the developer leaves or forgets the reason that the test returns one specific value and not some other, you're screwed. TDD is fine IF it is adequately documented and surrounded by human-readable (ie. pointy-haired manager) documentation that can be referred to in 5 years when the world changes and your app needs to as well. When I speak of documentation, this isn't a blurb in code, this is official writing that exists external to the application, such as use cases and background information that can be referred to by managers, lawyers and the poor sap who has to update your code in 2011. |
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If you want to do "real" TDD (read: Test First with Red, Green, Refactor), then you also have to start using Mock/Stubs, when you want to test integration points. When you start using Mock's then after a while, you will want to start using Dependency Injection (DI) and a Inversion of Control (IoC) container. To do that you need to use Interfaces for every thing (which all has a lot of pitfalls themselves). At the end of the day, you have to write a lot more code, than if you just do it the "plain old way". Instead of just a customer class, you also to need to write a Interface, a mock class, some IoC configuration ad a few tests. And remember that test code should also be maintained and cared for. Tests should be as readable as everything else, and it takes time to write good code. Also many developers don't quit understand how to do all this "right". But because everybody tells them that TDD is the only true way to develop software, they just try the best they can. But it is much harder than one think. Often TDD projects ends up with a lot of code that nobody rely understands. The Unit Tests often test the wrong think, the wrong way. And nobody agrees how a good tests looks like, not even the so called Gurus agrees. Also all those test, makes it a lot harder to "change" (opposite to refactroing) the behavior of your system, and simple changes just becomes to hard and time consuming. If you read the TDD literature, they always have some very good samples. But often in real life applications, you have to have a User Interface and a database. This is where TDD gets really hard, and most literature don't have a good answers. And if it does, it always involves more abstractions... mock objects, programming to an interface, MVC/MVP patterns etc., which again requires a lot of knowledge, and... you have to write even more code. So be careful... if you don't have an enthusiastic team and at least one experienced developer who knows how to write good tests, and also knows a few thing about good architecture, you really have to think twice before going down the TDD road. |
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Refocusing on difficult, unforeseen requirements is the constant bane of the programmer. Test-driven development forces you to focus on the already-known, mundane requirements, and limits your development to what has already been imagined. Think about it, you are likely to end up designing to specific test cases, so you won't get creative and start thinking "it would be cool if the user could do X, Y, and Z". Therefore, when that user starts getting all excited about potential cool requirements X, Y, and Z, your design may be too rigidly focused on already specified test cases, and it will be difficult to adjust. This, of course, is a double edged sword. If you spend all your time designing for every conceivable, imaginable, X, Y, and Z that a user could ever want, you will inevitably never complete anything. If you do complete something, it will be impossible for anyone (including yourself) to have any idea what you're doing in your code/design. |
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If your tests are not very thorough you might fall into a false sense of "everything works" just because you tests pass. Theoretically if your tests pass, the code is working; but if we could write code perfectly the first time we wouldn't need tests. The moral here is to make sure to do a sanity check on your own before calling something complete, don't just rely on the tests. On that note, if your sanity check finds something that is not tested, make sure to go back and write a test for it. |
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You have to write applications in a different way: one which makes them testable. You'd be surprised how difficult this is at first. Some people find the concept of thinking about what they're going to write before they write it too hard. Concepts such as mocking can be difficult for some too. TDD in legacy apps can be very difficult if they weren't designed for testing. TDD around frameworks that are not TDD friendly can also be a struggle. TDD is a skill so junior devs may struggle at first (mainly because they haven't been taught to work this way). Overall though the cons become solved as people become skilled and you end up abstracting away the 'smelly' code and have a more stable system. |
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Prototyping can be very difficult with TDD - when you're not sure what road you're going to take to a solution, writing the tests up-front can be difficult (other than very broad ones). This can be a pain. Honestly I don't think that for "core development" for the vast majority of projects there's any real downside, though; it's talked down a lot more than it should be, usually by people who believe their code is good enough that they don't need tests (it never is) and people who just plain can't be bothered to write them. |
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TDD requires you to plan out how your classes will operate before you write code to pass those tests. This is both a plus and a minus. I find it hard to write tests in a "vacuum" --before any code has been written. In my experience I tend to trip over my tests whenever I inevitably think of something while writing my classes that I forgot while writing my initial tests. Then it's time to not only refactor my classes, but ALSO my tests. Repeat this three or four times and it can get frustrating. I prefer to write a draft of my classes first then write (and maintain) a battery of unit tests. After I have a draft, TDD works fine for me. For example, if a bug is reported, I will write a test to exploit that bug and then fix the code so the test passes. |
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You will lose large classes with multiple responsibilities. You will also likely lose large methods with multiple responsibilities. You may lose some ability to refactor, but you will also lose some of the need to refactor. Jason Cohen said something like: TDD requires a certain organization for your code. This might be architecturally wrong; for example, since private methods cannot be called outside a class, you have to make methods non-private to make them testable. I say this indicates a missed abstraction -- if the private code really needs to be tested, it should probably be in a separate class. Dave Mann |
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You lose the ability to make incremental changes (code refactorings) and still feel warm and fuzzy that the code does what it is supposed to. You lose practically free and painless motivation to structure your code with minimal explicit dependencies. IOW, you'll be able to embed lots of dependencies without noticing. Were you to use TDD the dependencies would show up as pain/smell when writing the tests. |
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I think the biggest problem for me is the HUGE loss of time it takes "getting in to it". I am still very much at the beginning of my journey with TDD (See my blog for updates my testing adventures if you are interested) and I have literally spent hours getting started. It takes a long time to get your brain into "testing mode" and writing "testable code" is a skill in itself. TBH, I respectfully disagree with Jason Cohen's comments on making private methods public, that's not what it is about. I have made no more public methods in my new way of working than before. It does, however involve architectural changes and allowing for you to "hot plug" modules of code to make everything else easier to test. You should not be making the internals of your code more accessible to do this. Otherwise we are back to square one with everything being public, where is the encapsulation in that? So, (IMO) in a nutshell:
PS: If you would like links to positives, I have asked and answered several questions on it, check out my profile. |
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It can be hard and time consuming writing tests for "random" data like XML-feeds and databases (not that hard). I've spent some time lately working with weather data feeds. It's quite confusing writing tests for that, at least as i don't have too much experience with TDD. |
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When you get to the point where you have a large number of tests, changing the system might require re-writing some or all of your tests, depending on which ones got invalidated by the changes. This could turn a relatively quick modification into a very time-consuming one. Also, you might start making design decisions based more on TDD than on actually good design prinicipals. Whereas you may have had a very simple, easy solution that is impossible to test the way TDD demands, you now have a much more complex system that is actually more prone to mistakes. |
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It's percieved as slower. Long term that's not true in terms of the grief it will save you down the road, but you'll end up writing more code so arguably you're spending time on "testing not coding". It's a flawed argument, but you did ask! |
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I second the answer about initial development time. You also lose the ability to confortably work without the safety of tests. I've also been described as a TDD nutbar, so you could lose a few friends ;) |
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