Below are the slides I used for my talk several weeks ago at the Central Ohio .NET Developers Group (CONDG).
In this talk I discuss various libraries and techniques for expanding .NET unit testing with a goal of exposing the audience to as many different types of testing libraries as possible.
For more details on Scientist .NET, I recommend you read my in-depth article on it:
![integerman](https://res.cloudinary.com/practicaldev/image/fetch/s--y9MOEA1s--/c_limit%2Cf_auto%2Cfl_progressive%2Cq_auto%2Cw_800/https://res.cloudinary.com/practicaldev/image/fetch/s--lP6mpoxu--/c_fill%2Cf_auto%2Cfl_progressive%2Ch_150%2Cq_auto%2Cw_150/https://dev-to-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/user/profile_image/71302/74cf3bad-1dea-411b-b68b-d34cbcedd625.jpg)
Victimless Canary Testing with Scientist .NET
Matt Eland ・ Aug 31 '19
I discuss more about snapshot testing and Snapper in this article:
Code and slides are available in the following GitHub repo:
IntegerMan
/
SoftwareQualityTalk
Slides and sample code from a talk I'm giving on Software Quality and .NET applications
Software Quality Talk
Slides and sample code from a talk I'm giving on Software Quality and .NET applications
Full slides are available via SlideShare at https://www.slideshare.net/MattEland/how-do-you-tame-a-big-ball-of-mud-one-test-at-a-time
Top comments (1)
Incidentally, I learned a lot from these slides that I would change for next time. Simplifying the code, relying on text and not pictures for code, and using stronger contrasting colors are a few takeaways, as are looking to make the slides simpler and flow a bit more conversationally (though the arrows animate in the actual presentation from point to point, which helps with audience focus).