68: test && commit || revert (TCR) - Thomas Deniffel
Test & Code in Python - A podcast by Brian Okken
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With conventional TDD, you write a failing test, get it to pass, then refactor.
Then run the tests again to make sure your refactoring didn't break anything.
But what if it did break something?
Kent Beck has been recommending to commit your code to revision control after every green test run.
Oddmund Strømme suggested a symmetrical idea to go ahead and revert the code when a test fails.
Kent writes that he hated the idea, but had to try it.
Then wrote about it last September.
And now we have TCR, "(test && commit) || revert".
What's it feel like to actually do this?
Well, Thomas Deniffel has been using it since about a month after that article came out.
In this episode, we'll hear from Thomas about his experience with it.
It's a fascinating idea. Have a listen and let me know what you think.
Special Guest: Thomas Deniffel.
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Links:
- test && commit || revert — Kent Beck's original article
- TCR: (test && commit || revert). How to use? Alternative to TDD? — Thomas Deniffel's article
- TCR Variants (test && commit || revert)
- TCR: A pulverizer for coding tasks — Another interesting opinion from someone else trying TCR - Jason Crawford
- (test && commit || revert) Questions Answered — Written after this interview.