* What to Do if Your Code Has Few, If Any Tests? * Agitar Webinar with Ted Husted * 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. PST on Wednesday 26 April
Everyone has worked on a code base that seems to work, but has almost no test assets. Maybe you've had some system-level tests or functional demos that provide a quick "health check." But you have nothing to validate functionality or test the corner cases. As a developer in this situation, you're flying blind. That goes double if your code is a framework or application componentry. Ted Husted, member of the Apache Struts development team, had exactly this problem with the open source Struts framework. He'll be presenting a webinar on his experiences with using Agitar to investigate the Struts 1.2 code base and automatically create a series of unit tests. The presentation will provide an overview of what a typical developer would experience, how they need to think about exploratory unit testing, and how to make the most quality progress with a body of code that has few if any tests. Registration for the 7 a.m. PST webinar, or the 5 p.m. PST one, is required. * 7a PST - http://www.elabs6.com/c.html?rtr=on&s=dk2,pok,38g,crv,huhw,fgpm,fzl8 * 5p PST - http://www.elabs6.com/c.html?rtr=on&s=dk2,pok,38g,lv0i,2on0,fgpm,fzl8 NOTE: Unlike Struts, the Agitator is *not* a free open source tool. The Agitator is intended for large-scale Java projects who would like to implement an automated developer testing program. For more information about Agitar Software, visit the www.Agitar.com website Agitar Software - http://www.agitar.com DevelopterTesting.com - http://www.developertesting.com #### --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]