The Pragmatic Programmers, LLC., 2013. — 360 p. — ISBN13: 978-1-937785-48-2.
На англ. языке.
Modern C++ Programming With Test-Driven Development, the only comprehensive treatment on TDD in C++ provides you with everything you need to know about TDD, and the challenges and benefits of implementing it in your C++ systems. Its many detailed code examples take you step-by-step from TDD basics to advanced concepts. As a veteran C++ programmer, you’re already writing high-quality code, and you work hard to maintain code quality. It doesn’t have to be that hard.In this book, you’ll learn:how to use TDD to improve legacy C++ systems;
how to identify and deal with troublesome system dependencies;
how to do dependency injection, which is particularly tricky in C++;
how to use testing tools for C++ that aid TDD;
new C++11 features that facilitate TDD.
As you grow in TDD mastery, you’ll discover how to keep a massive C++ system from becoming a design mess over time, as well as particular C++ trouble spots to avoid. You’ll find out how to prevent your tests from being a maintenance burden and how to think in TDD without giving up your hard-won C++ skills. Finally, you’ll see how to grow and sustain TDD in your team.
Whether you’re a complete unit-testing novice or an experienced tester, this book will lead you to mastery of test-driven development in C++.
Global Setup.
Test-Driven Development: A First Example.
Test-Driven Development Foundations.
Test Construction.
Test Doubles.
Incremental Design.
Quality Tests.
Legacy Challenges.
TDD and Threading.
Additional TDD Concepts and Discussions.
Growing and Sustaining TDD.
What you need:A C++ compiler running under Windows or Linux, preferably one that supports C++
11. Examples presented in the book were built under gcc 4.7.2.
Google Mock 1.6 (downloadable for free; it contains Google Test as well) or an alternate C++ unit testing tool. Most examples in the book are written for Google Mock, but it isn’t difficult to translate them to your tool of choice.
A good programmer’s editor or IDE.
cmake, preferably. Of course, you can use your own preferred make too. CMakeLists.txt files are provided for each project. Examples provided were built using cmake version 2.8.9.
Various freely-available third-party libraries are used as the basis for examples in the book. These include: – cURL – JsonCpp – Boost (filesystem, date_time/gregorian, algorithm, assign) Several examples use the boost headers/libraries. Only one example uses cURL and JsonCpp.
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Cool Reader,
Calibre,
Adobe Digital Editions