Practitioners
Testing Object-Oriented Software
David C. Kung | Pei Hsia | Jerry Gao
Computers / Programming / Object Oriented
Object-oriented programming increases software reusability, extensibility, interoperability, and reliability. Software testing is necessary to realize these benefits by uncovering as many programming errors as possible at a minimum cost. A major challenge to the software engineering community remains how to reduce the cost while improving the quality of software testing. The requirements for testing object-oriented programs differ from those for testing conventional programs.
Testing Object-Oriented Software illustrates these differences and discusses object-oriented software testing problems, focusing on the difficulties and challenges testers face. The text contains of nineteen reprinted papers providing a general framework for class- and system-level testing and examines object-oriented design criteria and high testability metrics. It offers object-oriented testing techniques, ideas and methods for unit testing, and object-oriented program integration-testing strategy.
Readers are shown how to drastically reduce regression test costs, presented with steps for object-oriented testing, and introduced to object-oriented test tools and systems. The book's intended audience includes object-oriented program testers, program developers, software project managers, and researchers working with object-oriented testing.
David C. Kung and Pei Hsia are the authors of Testing Object-Oriented Software, published by Wiley.
| Publication Date: |
10 November 1998 |
| Publisher: |
Wiley |
| Imprint: |
Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Pr |
| ISBN-13: |
9780818685200 |
| Format: |
Paperback / softback |
| Page Count: |
284 |
| Weight (oz): |
24.16 |