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You're reading from  Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2022
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781801073639
Edition1st Edition
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Michael Dinder
Michael Dinder
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Michael Dinder

Michael Dinder works as a senior backend developer at Cart, Inc. Michael has helped to develop projects for large enterprises such as PayPal and other companies such as Corcoran Pacific Properties, and countless more either directly or indirectly. He has been programming for more than 15 years with a number of different languages and frameworks, with a focus on Python/Django for the past 5+ years.
Read more about Michael Dinder

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Getting started with unit testing

Unit testing is the act of testing the smallest components possible, such as logic statements, for example, 1 + 1 equals 2. That is what the SimpleTest class that the Visual Studio IDE created for us is actually testing for. These can be utility methods, conditional or comparison statements, Django models, forms, email messages, and so on.

Let's practice writing a simple test script and then write another to include our models.

Basic unit test script

In this exercise, we will write a very basic test class that executes two different test methods. These tests will not interact with a database and are only used to compare True and False statements. The class as a whole can be used as a boilerplate when creating new test classes and modified as needed.

Follow these steps:

  1. In your /chapter_9/tests.py file, add the structure of the class, as shown:
    # /becoming_a_django_entdev/chapter_9/tests.py
    from django.test import SimpleTestCase...
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Becoming an Enterprise Django Developer
Published in: Jun 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781801073639

Author (1)

author image
Michael Dinder

Michael Dinder works as a senior backend developer at Cart, Inc. Michael has helped to develop projects for large enterprises such as PayPal and other companies such as Corcoran Pacific Properties, and countless more either directly or indirectly. He has been programming for more than 15 years with a number of different languages and frameworks, with a focus on Python/Django for the past 5+ years.
Read more about Michael Dinder