Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Bob Bartlett
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- PART 1 REVIEW OF OLD-SCHOOL AND AGILE APPROACHES
- PART 2 EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT: AGILE CASE STUDIES
- 4 From Waterfall to Evolutionary Development and Test
- 5 How to Test a System That Is Never Finished
- 6 Implementing an Agile Testing Approach
- 7 Agile Testing in a Remote or Virtual Desktop Environment
- 8 Testing a Derivatives Trading System in an Uncooperative Environment
- 9 A Mixed Approach to System Development and Testing: Parallel Agile and Waterfall Approach Streams within a Single Project
- 10 Agile Migration and Testing of a Large-Scale Financial System
- 11 Agile Testing with Mock Objects: A CAST-Based Approach
- 12 Agile Testing – Learning from Your Own Mistakes
- 13 Agile: The Emperor's New Test Plan?
- 14 The Power of Continuous Integration Builds and Agile Development
- 15 The Payoffs and Perils of Offshored Agile Projects
- 16 The Basic Rules of Quality and Management Still Apply to Agile
- 17 Test-Infecting a Development Team
- 18 Agile Success Through Test Automation: An eXtreme Approach
- 19 Talking, Saying, and Listening: Communication in Agile Teams
- 20 Very-Small-Scale Agile Development and Testing of a Wiki
- 21 Agile Special Tactics: SOA Projects
- 22 The Agile Test-Driven Methodology Experiment
- 23 When Is a Scrum Not a Scrum?
- PART 3 AGILE MY WAY: A PROPOSAL FOR YOUR OWN AGILE TEST PROCESS
- APPENDIX A The Principles of Rapid Application Development
- APPENDIX B The Rules and Practices of Extreme Programming
- Appendix C The Principles of the Dynamic Systems Development Method
- Appendix D The Practices of Scrum
- APPENDIX E Agile Test Script Template
- Appendix F Agile Test Result Record Form Template
- Appendix G Agile Test Summary Report Template
- Appendix H My Agile Process Checklist
- References
- Index
17 - Test-Infecting a Development Team
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword by Bob Bartlett
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- PART 1 REVIEW OF OLD-SCHOOL AND AGILE APPROACHES
- PART 2 EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT: AGILE CASE STUDIES
- 4 From Waterfall to Evolutionary Development and Test
- 5 How to Test a System That Is Never Finished
- 6 Implementing an Agile Testing Approach
- 7 Agile Testing in a Remote or Virtual Desktop Environment
- 8 Testing a Derivatives Trading System in an Uncooperative Environment
- 9 A Mixed Approach to System Development and Testing: Parallel Agile and Waterfall Approach Streams within a Single Project
- 10 Agile Migration and Testing of a Large-Scale Financial System
- 11 Agile Testing with Mock Objects: A CAST-Based Approach
- 12 Agile Testing – Learning from Your Own Mistakes
- 13 Agile: The Emperor's New Test Plan?
- 14 The Power of Continuous Integration Builds and Agile Development
- 15 The Payoffs and Perils of Offshored Agile Projects
- 16 The Basic Rules of Quality and Management Still Apply to Agile
- 17 Test-Infecting a Development Team
- 18 Agile Success Through Test Automation: An eXtreme Approach
- 19 Talking, Saying, and Listening: Communication in Agile Teams
- 20 Very-Small-Scale Agile Development and Testing of a Wiki
- 21 Agile Special Tactics: SOA Projects
- 22 The Agile Test-Driven Methodology Experiment
- 23 When Is a Scrum Not a Scrum?
- PART 3 AGILE MY WAY: A PROPOSAL FOR YOUR OWN AGILE TEST PROCESS
- APPENDIX A The Principles of Rapid Application Development
- APPENDIX B The Rules and Practices of Extreme Programming
- Appendix C The Principles of the Dynamic Systems Development Method
- Appendix D The Practices of Scrum
- APPENDIX E Agile Test Script Template
- Appendix F Agile Test Result Record Form Template
- Appendix G Agile Test Summary Report Template
- Appendix H My Agile Process Checklist
- References
- Index
Summary
SYNOPSIS
A software quality services company had a good idea for a software product; they assembled a team of developers to build it and instructed them to run it as an agile project. Competent and experienced, but new to agile and skeptical of what seemed like radical new processes, the developers learned from first-hand experience that tests are highly valuable information sources, and that thinking about development from a test-first perspective leads to highly efficient, bug-free software design. They became “test-infected” – a condition where developers are so enthused about test-driven development that they refuse to return to their “bad old ways” of writing software without tests.
Introduction
My name is David Evans. I am the Director of Methodology at SQS, a pure-play testing and software quality consultancy. I am also the chief Agile Testing Evangelist in the company.
I have been in the software development and testing business for twenty years, first as a mainframe developer and tester, later moving to object-oriented C++ windows development and then .NET web development. In 2000 I joined Cresta, a testing consultancy, where I specialized in test automation, test methodology, and software quality practices. Cresta was later acquired by SQS.
In 2002 while carrying out a test strategy assignment for a global pharmaceutical company, I came across Extreme Programming (XP), which was being trialled by some of their development teams, and had to factor this into their enterprise-wide test strategy.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Agile TestingHow to Succeed in an Extreme Testing Environment, pp. 122 - 131Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009