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Artur Neumann for JankariTech

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at linkedin.com

Demonstrating TDD (Test-driven development) in Go

TDD is the practice to write tests before code and it should reduce failure rates and defects in your software.
In this blog-post I want to demonstrate how it can work.

starting point

I'm writing an application in Go that should convert Bikram Sambat (BS) (also called Vikram Samvat) dates to Gregorian dates and vice-versa. Vikram Samvat is a calendar used mostly in Nepal and India. But even if you don't use it, this demonstration might be useful for you to understand TDD.

So far I have done a bit of work that makes it possible to create a BS (Bikram Sambat) date instance, to get its details and to convert it to a Gregorian date. See: https://github.com/JankariTech/GoBikramSambat/blob/b99c510b22faf8395becda9a6dec1d0239504bb1/bsdate.go

These functions are also tested: https://github.com/JankariTech/GoBikramSambat/blob/b99c510b22faf8395becda9a6dec1d0239504bb1/bsdate_test.go

Now I want to add the possibility to convert a Gregorian date to a Bikram Sambat date. To do so, I want to be able to create a BS-date-instance by using a Gregorian date, then I could just get the BS-date details and the conversion is done.

Something like nepaliDate, err := NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear) would be great and then simply use the existing nepaliDate.GetDay() nepaliDate.GetMonth() and nepaliDate.GetYear()

1. create the test

According to TDD I first have to create a test.
So in the file bsdate_test.go I create a new function called TestCreateFromGregorian().
As I already have a table of test-dates that are used for the conversion from Nepali to Gregorian I will use that data also to test the reverse conversion.

Here is the test data and the test function:

type TestDateConversionStruc struct {
    bsDate        string
    gregorianDate string
}

var convertedDates = []TestDateConversionStruc{
    {"2068-04-01", "2011-07-17"}, //a random date
    {"2068-01-01", "2011-04-14"}, //1st Baisakh
    {"2037-11-28", "1981-03-11"},
    {"2038-09-17", "1982-01-01"}, //1st Jan
    {"2040-09-17", "1984-01-01"}, //1st Jan in a leap year
...
}

func TestCreateFromGregorian(t *testing.T) {
    for _, testCase := range convertedDates {
        t.Run(testCase.bsDate, func(t *testing.T) {
            var splitedBSDate = strings.Split(testCase.bsDate, "-")
            var expectedBsDay, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedBSDate[2])
            var expectedBsMonth, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedBSDate[1])
            var expectedBsYear, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedBSDate[0])

            var splitedGregorianDate = strings.Split(testCase.gregorianDate, "-")
            var gregorianDay, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedGregorianDate[2])
            var gregorianMonth, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedGregorianDate[1])
            var gregorianYear, _ = strconv.Atoi(splitedGregorianDate[0])

            nepaliDate, err := NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear)
            assert.Equal(t, err, nil)
            assert.Equal(t, nepaliDate.GetDay(), expectedBsDay)
            assert.Equal(t, nepaliDate.GetMonth(), expectedBsMonth)
            assert.Equal(t, nepaliDate.GetYear(), expectedBsYear)
        })
    }
}
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The function takes entries from the convertedDates list, splits them, tries to create a BS date out of the particular gregorian test-case and then asserts that the BS date (day, month, year) is as expected.

2. run the tests

The test is done, according to TDD I have to run it.

go test -v

results in:

# NepaliCalendar/bsdate [NepaliCalendar/bsdate.test]
./bsdate_test.go:171:23: undefined: NewFromGregorian
FAIL    NepaliCalendar/bsdate [build failed]
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That was expected, the function does not exist, no wonder my tests fail. What to do next? Guess what: implement the function.
That makes TDD so easy, you just do what the tests tell you to fix.

3. fix it

That's easy, add to bsdate.go a new function:

func NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear int) (Date, error) {

}
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4. repeat

running the tests again I get:

./bsdate.go:195:1: missing return at end of function

That is true, let's return something, but what? Hey let's just create a BS date with the Gregorian numbers

 func NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear int) (Date, error) {
-
+       return New(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear)
 }
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You are saying that will not work? I don't care, I do TDD, the test tells me to return something, and I do return, I even return the correct type of value.

lets run the tests again:

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-04-01
    assert.go:24: got '17' want '1'

    assert.go:24: got '7' want '4'

    assert.go:24: got '2011' want '2068'

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-01-01
    assert.go:24: got '14' want '1'

    assert.go:24: got '4' want '1'

    assert.go:24: got '2011' want '2068'

....
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a lot of failures, you have guessed it, the conversion does not work. So lets implement some bits.

We know that BS is 56 point something years ahead of Gregorian. So adding 56 to the gregorian year should help:

 func NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear int) (Date, error) {
-       return New(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear)
+       var bsYear = gregorianYear + 56
+       return New(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, bsYear)
 }
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test results look better, instead of

....
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2037-11-28
    assert.go:24: got '11' want '28'

    assert.go:24: got '3' want '11'

    assert.go:24: got '1981' want '2037'

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2038-09-17
    assert.go:24: got '1' want '17'

    assert.go:24: got '1' want '9'

    assert.go:24: got '1982' want '2038'
....
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I get:

....
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2037-11-28
    assert.go:24: got '11' want '28'

    assert.go:24: got '3' want '11'

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2038-09-17
    assert.go:24: got '1' want '17'

    assert.go:24: got '1' want '9'
....
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So some years are calculated correctly, at least. Lets fix more tests by calculating the years more accurate and also calculate the BS month.

Because of the way the BS-calendar works, there is no algorithm to convert the date directly from the Gregorian calendar, we need a table. We know that Jan 1st falls always in the 9th BS month (Paush). So we have a table of BS years where the first value is the day in Paush that is the 1st Jan in that year, then a list of days of every BS month.
We can easily get the day-of-year from the gregorian date. Starting from Paush, we count the days of each BS month, whenever we get over the gregorian day-of-year, we found the correct BS month.

2074: [13]int{17, 31, 31, 31, 32, 31, 31, 30, 29, 30, 29, 30, 30},
2075: [13]int{17, 31, 31, 32, 31, 31, 31, 30, 29, 30, 29, 30, 30},
2076: [13]int{16, 31, 32, 31, 32, 31, 30, 30, 30, 29, 29, 30, 30},
2077: [13]int{17, 31, 32, 31, 32, 31, 30, 30, 30, 29, 30, 29, 31},
2078: [13]int{17, 31, 31, 31, 32, 31, 31, 30, 29, 30, 29, 30, 30},
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These details have nothing to do with TDD, but help you to understand the coming algorithm.

lets put it into code:

 func NewFromGregorian(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, gregorianYear int) (Date, error) {
        var bsYear = gregorianYear + 56
-       return New(gregorianDay, gregorianMonth, bsYear)
+       var bsMonth = 9                         //Jan 1 always fall in BS month Paush which is the 9th month
+       var daysSinceJanFirstToEndOfBsMonth int //days calculated from 1st Jan till the end of the actual BS month,
+                                               // we use this value to check if the gregorian Date is in the actual BS month
+
+       year := time.Date(gregorianYear, time.Month(gregorianMonth), gregorianDay, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)
+       var gregorianDayOfYear = year.YearDay()
+
+       //get the BS day in Paush (month 9) of 1st January
+       var dayOfFirstJanInPaush = calendardata[bsYear][0]
+
+       //check how many days are left of Paush
+       daysSinceJanFirstToEndOfBsMonth = calendardata[bsYear][bsMonth] - dayOfFirstJanInPaush + 1
+
+       //If the gregorian day-of-year is smaller or equal to the sum of days between the 1st January and
+       //the end of the actual BS month we found the correct nepali month.
+       //Example:
+       //The 4th February 2011 is the gregorianDayOfYear 35 (31 days of January + 4)
+       //1st January 2011 is in the BS year 2067 and its the 17th day of Paush (9th month)
+       //In 2067 Paush had 30days, This means (30-17+1=14) there are 14days between 1st January and end of Paush
+       //(including 17th January)
+       //The gregorianDayOfYear (35) is bigger than 14, so we check the next month
+       //The next BS month (Mangh) has 29 days
+       //29+14=43, this is bigger than gregorianDayOfYear(35) so, we found the correct nepali month
+       for ; gregorianDayOfYear > daysSinceJanFirstToEndOfBsMonth; {
+               bsMonth++
+               if bsMonth > 12 {
+                       bsMonth = 1
+                       bsYear++
+               }
+               daysSinceJanFirstToEndOfBsMonth += calendardata[bsYear][bsMonth]
+       }
+
+       return New(gregorianDay, bsMonth, bsYear)
 }
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and now? You guessed it! Run the tests:

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-04-01
    assert.go:24: got '17' want '1'

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-01-01
    assert.go:24: got '14' want '1'

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2037-11-28
    assert.go:24: got '11' want '28'

....
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Actually, while implementing the algorithm I've run the tests multiple times and found mistakes in mixed-up variable names and other rubbish. That's cool, the tests helped me to find the issues right away.

But the tests still fail, I better get the day calculation correct.
We know the correct BS month, and we know the days since 1st Jan till the end of this month. Subtracting the day-of-the-year of the gregorian calendar from the days since 1st Jan till the end of the correct BS month will give us the amount of days between the searched day and the end of the BS month. Subtracting that number from the amount of days in the BS month should bring us to the correct date.

So many words to describe it, so little effort to write it in code:

-       return New(gregorianDay, bsMonth, bsYear)
+       var bsDay = calendardata[bsYear][bsMonth] - (daysSinceJanFirstToEndOfBsMonth - gregorianDayOfYear)
+
+       return New(bsDay, bsMonth, bsYear)
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I hear you shouting: "Run the tests, run the tests!" Don't worry, I will:

=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-04-01
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-01-01
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2037-11-28
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2038-09-17
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2040-09-17
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2040-09-18
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2041-09-17
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2041-09-18
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-09-01
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-08-29
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-09-20
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-08-30
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-16
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2074-09-16
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-17
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-01
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-11-17
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-11-18
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2075-11-16
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-02-01
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-02-32
=== RUN   TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-03-01
--- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-04-01 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-01-01 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2037-11-28 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2038-09-17 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2040-09-17 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2040-09-18 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2041-09-17 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2041-09-18 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-09-01 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-08-29 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2068-09-20 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-08-30 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-16 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2074-09-16 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-17 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2077-09-01 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-11-17 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-11-18 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2075-11-16 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-02-01 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-02-32 (0.00s)
    --- PASS: TestCreateFromGregorian/2076-03-01 (0.00s)
PASS
ok      NepaliCalendar/bsdate   0.002s
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The tests pass, job done! Commit it, push it and get yourself some Chiya!

You can find all the changes of this post here: https://github.com/JankariTech/GoBikramSambat/pull/4/

conclusion

TDD is easy: think about what you want to achieve, write tests for it and wildly hack code till your tests pass.

An other big advantage is: I can refactor my code all I like and still be confident it works fine. Maybe I want to optimize the speed of the algorithm, maybe I don't like it altogether and come up with a better one, or I simply want to change variable names. I can do that all without fear of messing up the functionality, as long as my tests are passing I'm pretty sure the code reacts the same.

maybe the next step

An other useful principle in software development is BDD (Behavior-driven development), it emerged out of TDD and uses its general principles but focuses not on defining and testing a single unit (function) but on describing the behaviour of the system and by that improving the communication between different stakeholders of the project. I've written a post about BDD using the same project and taking it further: https://dev.to/jankaritech/demonstrating-bdd-behavior-driven-development-in-go-1eci

Top comments (11)

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_rice_salad profile image
Rhys S

Technically you didn't follow the tight TDD loop of only writing as much test code as necessary to produce a failing test. Instead you wrote multiple test cases and proceeded to fix them all at the same time (multiple being each of your 'convertedDates').

This is still way better than writing tests after the fact, or worse still not writing tests.

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individualit profile image
Artur Neumann

Yes you are right, thank you for the comment.
I could have splitt the test cases more. E.g. first test a year conversion, then a month conversion, then a day. And fix the problems between the tests. Also more scientifically correct would have been to test a single date only, fix it, test an other date, etc.

On the other hand one could argue I have only tested correct dates. Next iteration should test incorrect Gregorian dates, the one after that, dates that are outside of the provided table, etc.

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quii profile image
Chris James

It's actually very important that you write one test as a time, make it pass and then refactor.

Doing large chunks is how a lot of people get in to a mess.

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gypsydave5 profile image
David Wickes

Your example of TDD is poor for many reasons, but I'm going to focus on just two

REFACTORING

Refactoring is the soul of TDD; it's the space where we think about what we've done and what it means, what is my code trying to say about the problem. We get to be creative, we think of algorithms, we think of better ways of expressing the solution.

What we don't do is immediately pivot to writing a table and then using the tests to 'debug' it. Maybe we will have a table at the end of our iterations, maybe it'll be a big switch statement - or maybe there really is an algorithm. Who knows? But we should build up slowly, one test case at a time, as we discover and learn more about our domain and the code we've written.

ONE TEST AT A TIME

But what's worse is that you're essentially writing code to a specification written by someone else. That someone else is you. Just grinding through until a specification is fulfilled removes the space for reflection about the spec (is it right?, can I improve how it's expressed) that would come with refactoring.

What you're doing isn't TDD - it's writing all your unit tests first. You need to go slower, much slower, write less tests up front, and place refactoring at the heart of your practice.

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individualit profile image
Artur Neumann

Agree about the less tests.
I could have tested one date at a time.
I would also argue I did refactoring. The first approach of the algorithm was to add 56 years. It did not worked, but not in all cases, so I made it smarter.
By now I found an other edge case where the algorithm does not work, so I will add a test and refactor the algorithm till it works correctly.
Or do you mean something else by "refactoring"

"But what's worse is that you're essentially writing code to a specification written by someone else."

I don't quite understand what the problem is with that. There is a requirement ans I try to solve it with the code.

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quii profile image
Chris James

Refactoring means changing the code without changing behaviour.

Every example you gave of refactoring there changed the way the system worked (so not refactoring)

This might help quii.dev/The_Tests_Talk

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individualit profile image
Artur Neumann

hmm OK, I see. But for that I first need some code that does work and where the tests pass. After the tests pass with my (ugly, not optimized, not perfect) code I can start refactoring in the sense of changing code without changing the behaviour.
Where in TDD does that step come?

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quii profile image
Chris James • Edited

From the link I sent you above

  • Write a small test for a small amount of desired behaviour
  • Check the test fails with a clear error (red)
  • Write the minimal amount of code to make the test pass (green)
  • Refactor
  • Repeat.

If you want a more involved tutorial read github.com/quii/learn-go-with-tests

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rpgrca profile image
rpgrca

I know some Go but I usually code in .NET core, Python and Javascript so have to say that I find Go's handling of DDT (data-driven testing) pretty poor if you need to simulate it with a for loop. Is there another way of doing it? The code looks dirty, you got a loop inside a test method when unit tests in general (that means, applicable even if you are not using TDD) shouldn't have any logic, they should be atomic, with a single set of data and a single set of asserts per execution, which means no conditions, and a for loop includes one.

Not sure if it's a limitation of Go testing framework or not, that's why I ask if there's another way of implementing DDT.

Regards,

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individualit profile image
Artur Neumann

I think the loop is the way to do it in go see github.com/golang/go/wiki/TableDri...

Basically what you are doing in to multiple test runs by calling t.Run()

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individualit profile image
Artur Neumann

An other useful principle in software development is BDD (Behavior-driven development), it emerged out of TDD and uses its general principles but focuses not on defining and testing a single unit (function) but on describing the behaviour of the system and by that improving the communication between different stakeholders of the project. I've written a post about BDD using the same project and taking it further: dev.to/jankaritech/demonstrating-b...