Coincidentally, this article 
http://www.testearly.com/2006/10/22/testing-j2me-applications/ just came 
through my blog reader today.

Ben Hutchison wrote:
> We do a considerable amount of unit testing at Playscape Games.
>
> We use a self-built framework derived from J2MEUnit. Every unit test 
> runs in its own class, one test per class. We uses a configuration file 
> to run the full suite. Results are only printed to the console.
>
> While primitive, it provides great benefit over no unit testing, and the 
> shortcomings are relatively cosmetic once well written tests are in place.
>
> That said, we would love to adopt standardized JUnit 
> conventions/interfaces and tools. There are a number of efforts in 
> progress - Netbeans has something, I believe, theres the SE effort, and 
> theres a project called Gatling at Motorola. Given that we've something 
> that works now, Im waiting and watching for some more maturity before 
> investing time in an eval.
>
> I dont see the lack of reflection as an insoluble problem: a J2SE test 
> launcher can introspect the tests, and generate & inject the bytecode 
> "wiring" to invoke the testMyCode() method into a MIDlet, using CGLib or 
> perhaps dynamic proxies. It does require some know how-and engineering 
> however.
>
> -Ben
>
> Russel Winder wrote:
>
>   
>> This implies either people don't do unit testing or everyone "rolls
>> their own".  What do EclipseME users do?
>>  
>>
>>     

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using Tomcat but need to do more? Need to support web services, security?
Get stuff done quickly with pre-integrated technology to make your job easier
Download IBM WebSphere Application Server v.1.0.1 based on Apache Geronimo
http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=120709&bid=263057&dat=121642
_______________________________________________
Eclipseme-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/eclipseme-users

Reply via email to