In what I hope will be the first of several articles about Guice, a new lightweight dependency injection container from Bob Lee and Kevin Bourillion from Google, this article examines the simplest and most obvious use case for the Guice container, for mocking or faking objects in unit tests. In future articles I will examine other, more ambitious areas where it can be used, including dependency elimination in large code bases.
I have been thinking much about Metaprogramming lately. I have come to the conclusion that I would like to see more examples and explanations of these techniques. For good or bad, metaprogramming has entered the Ruby community as the standard way of accom
Edsger Wybe Dijkstra was one of the most influential members of computing science's founding generation. Among the domains in which his scientific contributions are fundamental are
What is a framework? So that we’re all on the same page, let’s agree—at least for the duration of this article—on this definition of “framework”: a set of tools, libraries, conventions, and best practices that attempt to abstract routine task
Interfaces and Abstract Classes are language constructs that appear over and over in many design patterns and even just in good design techniques. It is common for a single interface or abstract class to have many different descendants or implementations. A good example of this scenario is the Strategy Pattern which relies heavily on many implementations of the same interface.
It is desirable to have one test suite that tests functional compliance with the interface that could be applied to each of the implementing classes.