35 lines
1.8 KiB
PHP
35 lines
1.8 KiB
PHP
<b>CLASSES</b><br \><br \>
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<ul>
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<li \>
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All test classes should be referring to a class or specific testing aspect of some class.
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<br \><br \>
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For example <i>Doctrine_Record_TestCase</i> is a valid name since its referring to class named
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<i>Doctrine_Record</i>.
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<br \><br \>
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<i>Doctrine_Record_State_TestCase</i> is also a valid name since its referring to testing the state aspect
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of the Doctrine_Record class.
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<br \><br \>
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However something like <i>Doctrine_PrimaryKey_TestCase</i> is not valid since its way too generic.
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<br \><br \>
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<li \> Every class should have atleast one TestCase equivalent
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<li \> All testcase classes should inherit Doctrine_UnitTestCase
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</ul>
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<br \><br \>
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<b>METHODS</b><br \><br \>
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<ul>
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<li \>All methods should support agile documentation; if some method failed it should be evident from the name of the test method what went wrong.
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Also the test method names should give information of the system they test.<br \><br \>
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For example <i>Doctrine_Export_Pgsql_TestCase::testCreateTableSupportsAutoincPks()</i> is a valid test method name. Just by looking at it we know
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what it is testing. Also we can run agile documentation tool to get little up-to-date system information.
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<br \><br \>
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NOTE: Commonly used testing method naming convention TestCase::test[methodName] is *NOT* allowed in Doctrine. So in this case
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<b class='title'>Doctrine_Export_Pgsql_TestCase::testCreateTable()</b> would not be allowed!
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<br \><br \>
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<li \>Test method names can often be long. However the content within the methods should rarely be more than dozen lines long. If you need several assert-calls
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divide the method into smaller methods.
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</ul>
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<b>ASSERTIONS</b><br \><br \>
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<ul>
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<li \>There should never be assertions within any loops and rarely within functions.
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