Simo Råman
Less common unit testing strategies - Extract & Override
(originally published September 1, 2012 at simoraman.wordpress.com)
I have been reading Art of Unit Testing by Roy Osherove. He talks about a strategy he calls Extract & Override. It is a way to break dependencies in order to make class more testable. Let’s look at a simple example:
public class Class
{
public int DoCalculation(int number)
{
var value=Singleton.Instance.GetValue(); . . .
The pain of Windows Installer creation
(originally published August 6, 2012 at simoraman.wordpress.com)
Recently I worked on a project where Windows application is delivered to the customer with Windows installer(.msi). Msi-file was created using the out-of-the-box Visual Studio Windows setup-project. The setup project was built whenever new .msi had to be delivered. The first time building the setup-project failed because some file was left . . .
Web crawler in python
(published originally April 17, 2011 at simoraman.wordpress.com)
Intro
I needed to do some web crawling for a personal project. Instead of using any of the crawlers that are available I decided to write my own.
Python is a language I love to dabble on so I decided to write my crawler with that. Python also has awesome Beautiful Soup –library for parsing html. I wrote it using IronPython, . . .
Active Record with Linq To SQL, part II
Saving and deleting (published originally March 6, 2011 at simoraman.wordpress.com)
This is second part of a series. Check out the first part if you haven’t already. The code can be found at BitBucket repo.
Last time we looked at data retrieval using Active Record –pattern. In this part we’ll do data persistence and do little bit of refactoring.
Saving and deleting
If we have made changes to a . . .
Active Record with Linq To SQL
Retrieving data (published originally February 2, 2011 at simoraman.wordpress.com)
Introduction
I decided to try and write a series about different data access methods. Main motivation being to learn them better. The first one in the series is Active Record. I am mostly a .NET-guy these days and I really want to get to know linq better, so I will be using Linq to SQL and C#.
Martin Fowler describes Active . . .