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JUnit Recipes: Practical Methods for Programmer Testing
When testing becomes a developer's habit good things tend to happen--good productivity, good code, and good job satisfaction. If you want some of that, there's no better way to start your testing habit, nor to continue feeding it, than with JUnit Recipes. In this book you will find one hundred and thirty-seven solutions to a range of problems, from
simple to complex, selected for you by an experienced developer and master tester. Each recipe follows the same organization giving you the problem and its background before discussing your options in solving it.
JUnit – the unit testing framework for Java – is simple to use, but some code can be tricky to test. When you're facing such code you will be glad to have this book. It is a how-to reference full of practical advice on all issues of testing, from how to name your test case classes to how to test complicated J2EE applications. Its valuable advice includes side matters that can have a big payoff, like how to organize your test data or how to manage expensive test resources.
What's Inside:
- Getting started with JUnit
- Recipes for:
servlets
JSPs
EJBs
Database code
much more
- Difficult-to-test designs, and how to fix them
- How testing saves time
- Choose a JUnit extension:
HTMLUnit
XMLUnit
ServletUnit
EasyMock
and more!
Chapter 1: Fundamentals
Chapter 2: Elementary Tests
Chapter 3: Organizing and Building JUnit Tests
Chapter 4: Managing Test Suites
Chapter 5: Working with Test Data
Chapter 6: Running JUnit Tests
Chapter 7: Reporting JUnit Results
Chapter 8: Troubleshooting
Part 2: JUnit and Frameworks
Chapter 9: Testing and XML
Chapter 10: Testing and JDBC
Chapter 11: Testing Enterprise JavaBeans
Chapter 12: Testing Web Components
Chapter 13: Testing J2EE Applications
Part 3: More Testing Techniques
Chapter 14: Testing Design Patterns
Chapter 15: GSBase
Chapter 16: JUnit-addons
Chapter 17: Odds and Ends
Appendix A: Complete Solutions
Appendix B: Essays on Testing
Appendix C: Reading List
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