What book would you recommend to learn test driven development? Preferrably language agnostic.
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Growing Object-Oriented Software, Guided by Tests by Addison-Wesley - it is about mocking frameworks - JMock and Hamcrest in particular. From description of the book:
EDIT: I'm now reading Working Effectively with Legacy Code by Michael Feathers which is pretty good. From the description of the book:
I read it already, it is one of the best programming books I've ever read (I personally think that it must be called Refactoring to Testability - it describes the processes for making your code testable). Because a testable code is good code. |
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For me, this is the best one:
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Fairly recent reasonably written book The Art of Unit Testing. I am surprised it wasn't mentioned here. |
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The Astels book is a solid introduction, Beck's book is good on the underlying concepts, Lasse Koskela has a newish one (Test Driven: TDD and Acceptance TDD for Java Developers). Osherove's book, as he says, is about Unit Testing, rather than TDD. I'm not sure that the Pragmatics' TDD book has aged as well as their original book. Most everything is Java or C#, but you should be able to figure it out yourself. |
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Dave Astels' Test-Driven Development: A Practical Guide |
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I'm a big fan of almost anything from the Pragmatic Bookshelf, but these two really helped drive the point home for me: The Pragmatic Programmer: From Journeyman to Master. This ages really well. I'd recommend it to any developer. Pragmatic Unit Testing in C# with NUnit, 2nd Edition. Don't let the title scare you. The concepts are pretty language agnostic, even with the C# examples. |
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