You can find all the code for this chapter here
Integers work as you would expect. Let's write an Add
function to try things out. Create a test file called adder_test.go
and write this code.
Note: Go source files can only have one package
per directory. Make sure that your files are organised into their own packages. Here is a good explanation on this.
Your project directory might look something like this:
learnGoWithTests
|
|-> helloworld
| |- hello.go
| |- hello_test.go
|
|-> integers
| |- adder_test.go
|
|- go.mod
|- README.md
package integers
import "testing"
func TestAdder(t *testing.T) {
sum := Add(2, 2)
expected := 4
if sum != expected {
t.Errorf("expected '%d' but got '%d'", expected, sum)
}
}
You will notice that we're using %d
as our format strings rather than %q
. That's because we want it to print an integer rather than a string.
Also note that we are no longer using the main package, instead we've defined a package named integers
, as the name suggests this will group functions for working with integers such as Add
.
Run the test go test
Inspect the compilation error
./adder_test.go:6:9: undefined: Add
Write enough code to satisfy the compiler and that's all - remember we want to check that our tests fail for the correct reason.
package integers
func Add(x, y int) int {
return 0
}
Remember, when you have more than one argument of the same type (in our case two integers) rather than having (x int, y int)
you can shorten it to (x, y int)
.
Now run the tests, and we should be happy that the test is correctly reporting what is wrong.
adder_test.go:10: expected '4' but got '0'
If you have noticed we learnt about named return value in the last section but aren't using the same here. It should generally be used when the meaning of the result isn't clear from context, in our case it's pretty much clear that Add
function will add the parameters. You can refer this wiki for more details.
In the strictest sense of TDD we should now write the minimal amount of code to make the test pass. A pedantic programmer may do this
func Add(x, y int) int {
return 4
}
Ah hah! Foiled again, TDD is a sham right?
We could write another test, with some different numbers to force that test to fail but that feels like a game of cat and mouse.
Once we're more familiar with Go's syntax I will introduce a technique called "Property Based Testing", which would stop annoying developers and help you find bugs.
For now, let's fix it properly
func Add(x, y int) int {
return x + y
}
If you re-run the tests they should pass.
There's not a lot in the actual code we can really improve on here.
We explored earlier how by naming the return argument it appears in the documentation but also in most developer's text editors.
This is great because it aids the usability of code you are writing. It is preferable that a user can understand the usage of your code by just looking at the type signature and documentation.
You can add documentation to functions with comments, and these will appear in Go Doc just like when you look at the standard library's documentation.
// Add takes two integers and returns the sum of them.
func Add(x, y int) int {
return x + y
}
If you really want to go the extra mile you can make Testable Examples. You will find many examples in the standard library documentation.
Often code examples that can be found outside the codebase, such as a readme file become out of date and incorrect compared to the actual code because they don't get checked.
Example functions are compiled whenever tests are executed. Because such examples are validated by the Go compiler, you can be confident your documentation's examples always reflect current code behavior.
Example functions begin with Example
(much like test functions begin with Test
), and reside in a package's _test.go
files, . Add the following ExampleAdd
function to the adder_test.go
file.
func ExampleAdd() {
sum := Add(1, 5)
fmt.Println(sum)
// Output: 6
}
(If your editor doesn't automatically import packages for you, the compilation step will fail because you will be missing import "fmt"
in adder_test.go
. It is strongly recommended you research how to have these kind of errors fixed for you automatically in whatever editor you are using.)
Adding this code will cause the example to appear in your godoc
documentation, making your code even more accessible. If ever your code changes so that the example is no longer valid, your build will fail.
Running the package's test suite, we can see the example ExampleAdd
function is executed with no further arrangement from us:
$ go test -v
=== RUN TestAdder
--- PASS: TestAdder (0.00s)
=== RUN ExampleAdd
--- PASS: ExampleAdd (0.00s)
Notice the special format of the comment, // Output: 6
. While the example will always be compiled, adding this comment means the example will also be executed. Go ahead and temporarily remove the comment // Output: 6
, then run go test
, and you will see ExampleAdd
is no longer executed.
To view example documentation, let's take a quick look at godoc
. Run godoc -http=:6060
and open a web browser to http://localhost:6060/pkg/
. Inside here you'll see a list of all of Go's Standard Library packages, plus Third Party packages you have installed, under which you should see your example documentation for learn-go-with-tests
. Now look under Integers
, then under func Add
, then expand Example
and you should see the example you added for sum := Add(1, 5)
.
If you publish your code with examples to a public URL, you can share the documentation of your code at pkg.go.dev. For example, here is the finalised API for this chapter. This web interface allows you to search for documentation of standard library packages and third-party packages.
What we have covered:
- More practice of the TDD workflow
- Integers, addition
- Writing better documentation so users of our code can understand its usage quickly
- Examples of how to use our code, which are checked as part of our tests