TDD Books
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Pro Apache Ant (Expert's Voice in Java)
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Matthew Moodie, Apress
Pro Apache Ant is ideal for Java developers who need to use the leading open source build tool out there for development and project management. It is organized around chronological tasks instead of alphabetical functions, using a sample application throughout the set-up, from calling database scripts to unit testing. Practical examples are used at every stage and each task includes a concrete example. The configuration files are XML based, so there's no need for you to write shell commands
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Pro Eclipse JST: Plug-ins for J2EE Development
Published 15 years ago includes sample chapter
by Christopher M. Judd, Hakeem Shittu, Apress
The open source Eclipse has proven to be a best-of-class, extensible application development framework. Out of the zip file, Eclipse offers many tools for developing Java applications including wizards, unit testing, debuggers, and editors. However, these tools do not support the development of enterprise applications. Up until this point, an enterprise developer using Eclipse had to spend a large amount of time locating and evaluating plug-ins to build a suite of enterprise tools.
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Agile Java(TM): Crafting Code with Test-Driven Development (Robert C. Martin Series)
Published 16 years ago
by Jeff Langr, Prentice Hall PTR
Agile Java is a valuable tutorial and reference. It introduces the Java languagewith no assumptions about a developer's background in Java, object-orienteddevelopment, or TDD. The book will also retain significant value as acookbook that readers will turn to time and again to learn how to approachTDD with respect to various language features.Teh author stresses the importance of TDD by showing coded tests for everyJava feature taught.
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eXtreme .NET: Introducing eXtreme Programming Techniques to .NET Developers (Microsoft .NET Development Series)
Published 16 years ago
by Neil Roodyn, Addison-Wesley Professional
In a major shift from the past, Microsoft has been encouraging developers whouse Visual Studio to pay attention to software architecture and softwaredevelopment methodologies. One methodology which is well-suited to the waythat many Microsoft development teams work is eXtreme Programming. Manydevelopers using VB and C# admire its flexibility, its emphasis on testing, andthe idea of developing in small teams.
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Real World Web Services
Published 16 years ago
by Will Iverson, O'Reilly Media
The core idea behind Real World Web Services is simple: after years of hype, what are the major players really doing with web services? Standard bodies may wrangle and platform vendors may preach, but at the end of the day what are the technologies that are actually in use, and how can developers incorporate them into their own applications? Those are the answers Real World Web Services delivers. It's a field guide to the wild and wooly world of non-trivial deployed web services.
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Unit Test Frameworks
Published 16 years ago
by Paul Hamill, O'Reilly Media
Unit test frameworks are a key element of popular development methodologies such as eXtreme Programming (XP) and Agile Development. But unit testing has moved far beyond eXtreme Programming; it is now common in many different types of application development. Unit tests help ensure low-level code correctness, reduce software development cycle time, improve developer productivity, and produce more robust software.
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JUnit Pocket Guide
Published 16 years ago
by Kent Beck, O'Reilly Media
JUnit, created by Kent Beck and Erich Gamma, is an open source framework for test-driven development in any Java-based code. JUnit automates unit testing and reduces the effort required to frequently test code while developing it. While there are lots of bits of documentation all over the place, there isn't a go-to-manual that serves as a quick reference for JUnit.
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JUnit Recipes: Practical Methods for Programmer Testing
Published 16 years ago
by J. B. Rainsberger, Manning Publications
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.
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Extreme Programming Adventures in C# (DV-Microsoft Professional)
Published 17 years ago
by Ron Jeffries, Microsoft Press
Apply what you know about extreme programming and object-oriented design to learning C# and the Microsoft® .NET Framework on the fly. Author Ron Jeffries, a leading voice and practitioner in the extreme programming movement, demonstrates how to apply its key concepts?including the use of customer stories, customer acceptance tests, and "Spikes"?and the fundamental techniques of Simple Design, Test-Driven Development, and Refactoring to create practical, .NET-ready applications. You?
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JUnit in Action
Published 17 years ago
by Vincent Massol, Ted Husted, Manning Publications
A guide to unit testing Java applications (including J2EE applications) using the JUnit framework and its extensions, this book provides techniques for solving real-world problems such as unit testing legacy applications, writing real tests for real objects, automating tests, testing in isolation, and unit testing J2EE and database applications.