Comment by threatofrain
8 days ago
It's that hard to write specs that truly match the business, hence why test-driven-development or specification-first failed to take off as a movement.
Asking specs to truly match the business before we begin using them as tests would handcuff test people in the same way we're saying that tests have the potential to handcuff app and business logic people — as opposed to empowering them. So I wouldn't blame people for writing specs that only match the code implementation at that time. It's hard to engage in prophecy.
The problem with TDD is that people assumed it was writing a specification, or directly tried to map it directly to post-hoc testing and metrics.
TDD at its core is defining expected inputs and mapping those to expected outputs at the unit of work level, e.g. function, class etc.
While UAT and domain informed what those inputs=outputs are, avoiding trying to write a broader spec that that is what many people struggle with when learning TDD.
Avoiding writing behavior or acceptance tests, and focusing on the unit of implementation tests is the whole point.
But it is challenging for many to get that to click. It should help you find ambiguous requirements, not develop a spec.
I literally do the diametric opposite of you and it works extremely well.
Im weirded out by your comment. Writing tests that couple to low level implementation details was something I thought most people did accidentally before giving up on TDD, not intentionally.
It isn't coupling low level implementation details, it is writing tests based on input and output of the unit under test.
The expected output from a unit, given an input is not an implementation detail, unless you have some very different definition of implementation detail than I.
Testing the unit under test produces the expected outputs from a set of inputs implies nothing about implementation details at all. It is also a concept older than dirt:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221329933_Iterative...
3 replies →
> So I wouldn't blame people for writing specs that only match the code implementation at that time.
WFT are you doing writing specs based on implementation? If you already have the implementation, what are you using the specs for? Or, if you want to apply this direct to tests, if you are already assuming the program is correct, what are you trying to test?
Are you talking about rewriting applications?
Where do you work if you don’t need to reverse engineer an existing implementation? Have you written everything yourself?
Unless you are rewriting the application, you shouldn't assume that whatever behavior you find on the system is the correct one.
Even more because if you are looking into it, it's probably because it's wrong.