James E. McDonough - Automated Unit Testing with ABAP: A Practical Approach
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Any source code or other supplementary material referenced by the author in this book is available to readers on GitHub via the books product page, located at www.apress.com/9781484269503 . For more detailed information, please visit http://www.apress.com/source-code .
To Norman Edge, teacher and bassist extraordinaire, whose benevolent guidance toward improving the qualities of my musicianship also had a profound influence on the qualities of my character.
I could not have done this project without the help of others.
I extend my gratitude to Chris Bostian, Larry Nansel, and Brian Brennan, who, after attending a presentation I gave on the subject of ABAP Unit testing to my colleagues in 2011, presented me with the opportunity to undertake a pilot project exploring how automated unit testing could be incorporated into the ABAP development process used at that site.
Thanks go to Dr. Juergen Heymann and Thomas Hammer, both of whom did a magnificent job of preparing and presenting the openSAP course Writing Testable Code for ABAP between March and May 2018, through which I realized that what I already knew on this topic was only the tip of the ABAP Unit testing iceberg.
I am very grateful to Paul Hardy for agreeing to undertake the task of reviewing the content of the book and for doing such a magnificent job at it, offering many suggestions for improvement.
Susan McDermott, Rita Fernando, and Laura Berendson, my editors at Apress Media, LLC, were of enormous help in guiding me through the publication process and resolving the technical glitches we encountered along the way.
Finally, it would have been much more difficult to complete this project without the love and understanding I received from my family for tolerating my absences during those long hours on weekends and holidays while I was secluded in deep thought about how to organize and present this content.
received a degree in music education from Trenton State College. After teaching music for only 2 years in the New Jersey public school system, he spent the past 38 years as a computer programmer while also maintaining an active presence as a freelance jazz bassist between New York and Philadelphia. Having switched from mainframe programming to ABAP in 1997, he now works as a contract ABAP programmer designing and writing ABAP programs on a daily basis. An advocate of using the object-oriented programming features available with ABAP, he has been teaching private ABAP education courses over the past few years, where his background in education enables him to present and explain complicated concepts in a way that makes sense to beginners.
joined HeidelbergCement in the United Kingdom in 1990. For the first seven years, he worked as an accountant. In 1997, a global SAP rollout came along, and he jumped on board and has never looked back. He has worked on country-specific SAP implementations in the United Kingdom, Germany, Israel, and Australia.
After starting off as a business analyst configuring the good old IMG, Paul swiftly moved on to the wonderful world of ABAP programming. After the initial run of data conversion programs, ALV (ABAP List Viewer) reports, interactive Dynpro screens, and SAPscript forms, he yearned for something more and since then has been eagerly investigating each new technology as it comes out, which culminated in him writing the book ABAP to the Future.
Paul became an SAP Mentor in March 2017 and can regularly be found blogging on the SAP Community site and presenting at SAP conferences in Australia (Mastering SAP Technologies and the SAP Australian User Group annual conference), at SAP TechEd Las Vegas, and all over Europe at various SAP Inside Track events. If you happen to be at one of these conferences, Paul invites you to come and have a drink with him at the networking event in the evening and to ask him the most difficult questions you can think of, preferably about SAP.
It is unlikely you still remember the first unit test you ever ran for an ABAP program you wrote. It is very likely you remember the most recent one. It is also very likely that the first and the last, and indeed all those tests in between, consisted of a manual effort executing the program over and over again using various combinations of values to insure the program produced the expected results. This seems to be the unit testing experience for the overwhelming majority of ABAP programmers, who remain pedestrians on the development superhighway when it comes to unit testing. For programmers coding in many other languages, it is commonplace for automated unit testing frameworks to be used as the vehicle whisking them along the software development expressway toward high-quality software.
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