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  • Productivity Testing

    30 Days of TDD – Day 30 – Conclusion

    I hope you’ve enjoyed this series and have found the information in it helpful in your development as a practitioner of Test Driven Development. This series may be over, but that doesn’t mean this is the last post about TDD that you’ll see on this blog. As time goes by I’ll be publishing posts to help bolster your TDD knowledge and keep your practice of TDD going.
    December 13, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    30 Days of TDD – Day 29 – Reader Question #5

    Brent Eritou asks How do I best communicate the benefits of TDD to my non-technical manager?
    December 11, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    Dusting off my keyboard to introduce the New Test Studio

    It’s been 2 years, 4 months, and 28 days since my last blog post – so I figured this one had better be good. Over the past several years, the team at Telerik has shipped countless new features evolving Test Studio from an automated testing tool to an end-to-end testing solution. While the focus has always been and will remain on end to end testing – we’ve decided to split our offering into two solutions – one focused on functional test automation, and one focused on load testing. For those who want it all – fear not, we will continue ...
    December 10, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    Test Studio 2013 R2 is Being Released Today

    Today we're happy to announce Test Studio R2 2013. This release brings changes to licensing and packaging, introducing our new monthly and annual subscriptions, as well as separate Functional and Load testing product bundles, making it easier for you to purchase just the product best suited for your project needs; Dan has a complete blog post on that. We're also bringing you several new features and enhancements: Earlier this year Test Studio introduced the new Test Recording surface - a JavaScript, KendoUI-based recording engine which enabled creation of tests using Chrome, FireFox and Safari. This release adds cross-browser improvements to ...
    December 10, 2013
  • Productivity Testing

    30 Days of TDD – Day 28 – Reader Question #4

    Robert Pack asks I noticed from the first installment of the series that you say you write classes and methods so that they only just pass tests and no more, cutting down on dead code and zombie bugs. Where does this fit into some peoples’ rules for methods having a maximum number of lines etc? Do you think that’s a completely unrealistic limit to place on methods and that they will be as long as they have to be or do you subscribe to keeping methods below a certain size? I’m interested to hear your thoughts on this.
    December 09, 2013