Course Intro
About the Course
Introduction to TDD
Outline
Why we need TDD
What is TDD
Red Green Refactor
Three Laws of TDD
Changing Requirements and the Safety Net
F.I.R.S.T
Code Coverage
Different Types of Tests
Testing Frameworks and Tools
When TDD Fails
Conclusion
TDD in Practice
Outline
Regular Agile Process
VS and ReSharper Shortcuts
Fibonacci Numbers
Three Main TDD Techniques
Grabbind the Gold
FizzBuzz
RomanNumerals
Updateable Spin
Continuos Testing
TicTacToe
Assert First
Game in Sticks
Conclusion
Katas
Outline
Stack
ImmutableStack
LinkedList
Conclusion
Test Doubles
Outline
Demo of a Testing Problem
Refactoring to Make Code Testable
Test Doubles
Hand-Rolled or Manual Test Doubles
Problems with Manual Test Doubles
Mocking Frameworks
Writing Unit Tests with a Mocking Framework
NSubstitute Mocking Framework. Key Features. Demo
Detroit School vs London School of Unit Testing
Conclusion
Acceptance and Integration Tests
Outline
What is Acceptance Testing
Overview of SpecFlow
Gherkin
Basics of SpecFlow
Integration and UI-Testing
UI-Automation Testing Frameworks
TestStack
Conclusion
TDD of a WPF App
Outline
App Overview
Writing Acceptance Tests
Building a Bridge to UI
Implementing Acceptance Tests
Implementing View Models-Part-1
Implementing View Models-Part-2
Conclusion
Thoughts on TDD
Outline
What is TDD in the End
Agile and TDD
TDD and Design Upfront
Do Unit Tests Guarantee the Success
Having No Tests is Better than Having Bad Tests
Architecture and Design
Conclusion
Best Practices
Outline
Ending the TDD Day
Pair Programming
Quality of Tests
TestData
Shouldly
Prefer Positive if-statements
Testing Trivial Code
The Rule of Testing a Single Concern
Singletons and Static Classes
Builder Design Pattern
Conclusion
TDD in C# From A to Z
Grow software by TDD with SpecFlow + TestStack White. Learn test-driven development and improve unit testing skills!
TDD in C# From A to Z
Grow software by TDD with SpecFlow + TestStack White. Learn test-driven development and improve unit testing skills!
Want to write maintainable and reliable code in C#? Then take this course right now!
The instructor is letting you choose the price you pay for this course!
The instructor is letting you choose the price you pay for this course!
Want to write maintainable and reliable code in C#? Then take this course right now!
About
About the Course
Today unit testing is the absolutely required skill which is required from any professional developer. Companies expect from developers to know how to write unit tests including all the most important topics such as mocking and test driven development (TDD in short).
This course is all about practicing TDD using C# programming language and NUnit as a unit testing framework. Along the way, we will learn the concepts related to unit testing. This course does not cover all the features of NUnit. This course is way more interesting.
Learning unit testing and TDD puts a powerful and very useful tool at your fingertips. Being familiar with unit testing and TDD you can write reliable and maintainable applications. It is very hard to lead a project which is not covered by unit tests.
Content and Overview
This course is primarily aimed at developers who’re already familiar with the basics of unit testing and dependency injection. Some experience in C# programming is required. The course provides solid theoretical base reinforced by tons of practical material.
We start with basics of test-driven development. Why we need TDD? What is TDD? When TDD fails, three laws of TDD, different types of tests, tooling and other fundamental topics. This section is mostly theoretical.
Theory is dead without practice, so starting from the second section, you’ll see tons of programming sessions where I’ll demonstrate how to implement generating of Fibonacci numbers, FizzBuzz, parsing of roman numerals, updateable spin synchronization primitives, tic-tac-toe or crosses and noughts game and game in sticks. You’ll also learn:
- How a regular agile development process looks like
- That you need to learn shortcuts to practice TDD more smoothly
- Three Main TDD techniques: faking, triangulation and obvious implementation
- Which tests to write first
- How to start writing a test in a TDD manner
- Stack kata
- Immutable stack kata
- And list kata
- What is acceptance testing
- About the SpecFlow acceptance testing framework
- How to write acceptance tests with SpecFlow in Gherkin language
- What are UI tests
- What tools for writing UI Tests exist
- How to access UI through the TestStack.White framework
Have you heard about katas? No, I’m talking about programming. In the third section, you’ll learn what is a code kata and I’ll demonstrate three code katas:
Growing an application by writing tests first, we’re not only writing unit tests first. So, in the next section, you’ll learn what is acceptance testing and integration testing. You’ll learn:
You’ll need to see how to apply all the material learned by this moment. Practice helps very much with understanding especially when we uncover highly practical topics such as TDD. That’s why I decided to show you how all the things work in practice altogether. So, in the next section, you’ll see a real enterprise approach for working on a software project in action.
- I’ll build a bridge to UI through TestStack.White applying the Page Object design pattern
- I’ll write acceptance tests using the bridge built for accessing UI
- I’ll implement ViewModels and all the corresponding business-logic
- What is TDD in the end? Is it possible to live without it?
- The relationships between TDD and Agile development process
- Should we design architecture upfront or not?
- Do unit tests guarantee the success?
- Quality of tests, some criterions
- How to express data for writing unit tests
- Shouldly for writing more readable assertions
- Singletons, Static classes and testability, Builder design pattern
- And some other important topics
The last two sections are rather philosophical. We will discuss:
- What is TDD in the end? Is it possible to live without it?
- The relationships between TDD and Agile development process
- Should we design architecture upfront or not?
- Do unit tests guarantee the success?
- Quality of tests, some criterions
- How to express data for writing unit tests
- Shouldly for writing more readable assertions
- Singletons, Static classes and testability, Builder design pattern
- and some other important topics
Here is my Teaching Approach -
No fluff, no ranting, no beating the air. I esteem your time. The course material is succinct, yet comprehensive. All important concepts are covered. Particularly important topics are covered in-depth. For absolute beginners, I offer my help on Skype absolutely free, if requested.
Take this course, and you will be satisfied.
Price
Course Price
Minimum price
$19.00
$20.00
You pay
$20.00Author earns
$16.00Instructor
About the Instructor
EngineerSpock
I'm thankful enough for that I love what I do.
I began my career as a postgraduate student participating in Microsoft ImagineCup contest.
I've been working with .NET platform since 2003. I've been professionally architecting and implementing software for more than 10 years, primarily based on the .NET platform. I'm passionate about building rich and powerful applications using modern technologies. I'm a certified specialist in Windows Applications and Service Communication Applications by Microsoft. I'm one of the coordinators of the MskDotNet User Group in Moscow.
"If it's work, we try to do less. If it's art, we try to do more." - Seth Godin.
What I can say is that software is my art.
Material
Course Material
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