[Insight-users] The Three Laws of TDD
Luis Ibanez
luis.ibanez at kitware.com
Wed Nov 12 08:27:30 EST 2008
The Three Laws of Test Driven Development (TDD)
===============================================
By now everyone knows that TDD asks us to write unit tests first,
before we write production code. But that rule is just the tip of
the iceberg. Consider the following three laws:
First Law:
You may not write production code until
you have written a *failing* unit test.
Second Law:
You may not write more of a unit test than is
sufficient to fail, and not compiling is failing.
Third Law:
You may not write more production code than
is sufficient to pass the current failing test.
These three laws lock you into a cycle that is perhaps thirty seconds
long. The test and the production code are written *TOGETHER*, with
the tests just a few seconds ahead of the production code.
If we work this way, we will write dozens of tests every day, hundreds
of tests every month, and thousands of tests every year. If we work this
way, those tests *will cover* virtually *all* of our production code.
The sheer bulk of those tests, which *can rival the size* of the
production code itself, can present a daunting management problem.
Keeping Tests Clean
===================
Some years back I was asked to coach a team who had explicitly decided
that their test code should not maintained to the same standards of
quality as their production code. They gave each other license to break
the rules in their unit test. "Quick and dirty" was the watchword. Their
variables did not have to be well named, their test functions did not
need to be short and descriptive. Their test code did not need to be
well designed and thoughtfully partitioned. So long as the test code
worked, and so long as it covered the production code, it was good enough.
Some of you reading this might sympathize with that decision. [...]
It's a huge step from writing that kind of throw-away test, to writing
a suite of automated unit tests. So, like the team I was coaching, you
might decide that having dirty tests is better than having no tests.
What this team did not realize was that having dirty tests is equivalent
to, if no worse than, having no tests. The problem is that tests must
change as the production code evolves. The dirtier the tests, the harder
they are to change. The more tangle the test code, the more likely it is
that you will spend more time cramming new tests into the suite than it
takes to write the new production code. As you modify the production
code, old tests start to fail, and the mess in the test code makes it
hard to get those tests to pass again. So the tests become viewed as an
ever-increasing liability.
From release to release the cost of maintaining my team's test suite
rose. Eventually it became the single biggest complaint among the
developers. When managers asked why their estimates were getting so
large, the developers blamed the tests. In the end they were forced to
discard the test suite entirely.
But, without a test suite they lost the ability to make sure that
changes to their code base worked as expected. Without a test suite they
could not ensure that changes to one part of their system did not break
other parts of their system. So their defect rate began to rise. As the
number of unintended defects rose, they started to fear making changes.
They stopped cleaning their production code because they feared the
changes would do more harm than good. Their production code began to
*rot*. In the end they were left with no tests, tangled and bug-riddled
production code, frustrated customers, and the feeling that their
testing effort had failed them.
In a way they were right. Their testing effort had failed them. But it
was *their decision* to allow the tests to be messy that was the seed
of that failure. Had they kept their tests clean, their testing effort
would not have failed. I can say this with some certainty because I have
participated in, and coached, many teams who have been successful with
*clean* unit tests.
The moral of the story is simple:
*Test code is just as important as production code*
It is not a second-class citizen. It requires thought, design, and care.
It must be kept as clean as production code.
--------------
excerpt from:
"Clean Code"
'A Handbook of Agile Software Craftsmanship'
Robert C. Martin.
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