From the PrefaceThe book does touch on some theory and definition, but the main purpose is to show you how to take tests that are causing you pain and turn them into tests that you're happy to work with.
Over a dozen years ago I read Refactoring for the first time; it immediately became my bible. While Refactoring isn’t about testing, it explicitly states: If you want to refactor, the essential precondition is having solid tests. At that time, if Refactoring deemed it necessary, I unquestionably complied. That was the beginning of my quest to create productive unit tests.
Throughout the 12+ years that followed reading Refactoring I made many mistakes, learned countless lessons, and developed a set of guidelines that I believe make unit testing a productive use of programmer time. This book provides a single place to examine those mistakes, pass on the lessons learned, and provide direction for those that want to test in a way that I’ve found to be the most productive.
For example, the book demonstrates how to go from...As of right now, you can read the first 2 chapters for free at https://leanpub.com/wewut/read
looping test with many (built elsewhere) collaborators
.. to individual tests that expect literals, limit scope, explicitly define collaborators, and focus on readability
.. to fine-grained tests that focus on testing a single responsibility, are resistant to cascading failures, and provide no friction for those practicing ruthless Refactoring.
I'm currently ~25% done with the book, and it's available now for $14.99. My plan is to raise the price to $19.99 when I'm 50% done, and $24.99 when I'm 75% done. Leanpub offers my book with 100% Happiness Guarantee: Within 45 days of purchase you can get a 100% refund on any Leanpub purchase, in two clicks. Therefore, if you find the above or the free sample interesting, you might want to buy it now and save a few bucks.
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