any reason why we don't just run something like jtidy on the generated output and thus
does not have to care about indentation too much everywhere ?
Agreed on all counts. This is one case where formatting matters,
because people are going to see and interact with this code, even though I'd argue
they could just apply their own formatter, it's best if they be presented with
something nice to begin with :)
On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 1:19 AM, Richard Kennard <richard(a)kennardconsulting.com>
wrote:
George's point is well taken. The current tests could be made less fragile. In
particular, there have been a number of complaints about '\r\n versus \n'
when building on Windows/Linux. I believe these are all resolved now, but the basic
concept is sound.
Having said that, there *is* something important about testing the white space. Namely,
we are making sure the generated code is indented correctly (has
the correct number of \t's) relative to its surrounding template. The idea is that it
doesn't 'stick out' as being generated code.
Also, with respect to 'black-box versus unit tests', I don't think this
should be an either-or thing. I think we should have both.
Regards,
Richard.
On 13/06/2012 3:12 PM, Dan Allen wrote:
> Let's not miss the original point that George makes, which is that comparing the
structure may make less fragile tests than comparing the raw HTML. I
> tend to agree, unless there is something very important about maintaining the
whitespace. Even then, a structure comparison tool should be able to
> accommodate that rule.
>
> -Dan
>
> On Wed, Jun 13, 2012 at 1:00 AM, Lincoln Baxter, III <lincolnbaxter(a)gmail.com
<mailto:lincolnbaxter@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> Yeah, I'm not sure there's a great way around this aside from a more
black-box functional approach, but even that might not be getting as
> fine-grained as some of these tests need to be. With greater test coverage, I
think it could be replaced, however.
>
> ~Lincoln
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 10:25 PM, Richard Kennard
<richard(a)kennardconsulting.com <mailto:richard@kennardconsulting.com>> wrote:
>
> +1 for this.
>
> However note there are different levels of tests. Classes like
FacesScaffoldScenarioTest are only meant to test very small, very specific things.
> Basically
> regression testing. Classes like FacesScaffoldWeatherTest are also small and
specific.
>
> The real testing is done using Arquillian (like FacesScaffoldPetClinicClient
and FacesScaffoldShoppingClient). Because whilst your point about
> 'if you
> place a line break in a generated XHTML... it breaks the whole test' is
very valid, even with XmlUnit you are vulnerable to 'if you place an
> extra XML
> element in a generated XHTML... it breaks the whole test'.
>
> Testing through Arquillian is the only way to be really sure the generated
app actually works, IMHO. Because you are testing it the way the user
> would.
>
> However, definitely +1 for using XmlUnit, as far as that goes.
>
> Regards,
>
> Richard.
>
> On 12/06/2012 12:09 PM, George Gastaldi wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I noticed that most of our scaffold unit tests are kinda hard to
> > maintain. specially because they compare XHTML as strings, instead of
> > the structure as a whole.
> > This implies that if you place a line break in a generated XHTML for
> > example, it breaks the whole test as well.
> > What about if we refactor these tests to use XmlUnit instead ?
> > (
http://xmlunit.sourceforge.net/)
> > This way we could compare the structure without the ugly plain string
> > comparison, WDYT ?
> >
> >
> > Regards,,
> > George Gastaldi
> > _______________________________________________
> > forge-dev mailing list
> > forge-dev(a)lists.jboss.org <mailto:forge-dev@lists.jboss.org>
> >
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/forge-dev
> >
> >
>
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>
> --
> Lincoln Baxter, III
>
http://ocpsoft.org
> "Simpler is better."
>
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> --
> Dan Allen
> Principal Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
> Registered Linux User #231597
>
>
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>
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>
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