Looks like an interesting approach to write tests. I should take a look.

Because indeed, for Athens rendering.. comparing rendered bits is a bit silly,
knowing that rendering quality may differ depending on backend.
>From other side, you need to test that it is "works" in some way.


On 24 May 2013 19:17, stephane ducasse <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: Randy Coulman <[email protected]>
> Subject: [vwnc] [ANN] SmalltalkFit
> Date: May 24, 2013 5:18:26 PM GMT+02:00
> To: VW NC <[email protected]>
>
> I have just released the latest version of SmalltalkFit, an implementation
> of Ward Cunningham's Framework for Integrated Tests,
> Fitnesse, and Rick Mugridge's FitLibrary.
>
> Fit is a tool for writing acceptance tests (integration
> tests/examples/executable specifications/whatever you want to call them).
> Fitnesse is a wiki wrapper around Fit, and FitLibrary adds additional ways
> of writing the tests.
>
> This version of SmalltalkFit includes the equivalent features of Fit Java
> 1.1, Fitnesse 20121220, and FitLibrary 2.0. It does not (yet) include a port
> of Fitnesse Slim.
>
> SmalltalkFit is available in the Cincom Public Store Repository.  A snapshot
> of the current version is also on GitHub. The Readme file on GitHub includes
> high-level documentation if you'd like more information before diving in.
>
> The full release announcement is on my blog, Courageous Software.
>
> Thanks,
> Randy
>
> --
> Randy Coulman
> Email: [email protected]
> Home: http://randycoulman.com
> Twitter: @randycoulman      GitHub: randycoulman
> _______________________________________________
> vwnc mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwnc
>
>



-- 
Best regards,
Igor Stasenko.

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