Foundations of Agile Python Development (Expert's Voice in Open Source)

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If you are looking to purchase this book, and you are in the year 2010 or beyond, DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK. Please continue reading my review below, however, to understand why. This book is outdated because: 1. It has extremely detailed instructions for using eclipse (the IDE) with pydev, mylyn, and pydev-extensions. Eclipse has changed a LOT since this book was written, and the instructions are no longer accurate. The pydev-extensions plugin doesn't actually exist anymore, it was merged with pydev. This can be confusing for new users trying to get things running. 2. The instructions for getting buildbot running are no longer correct. Buildbot has changed a bit as well, and the details for installation is different than it used to be. 3. It spends a while talking about pMock, one of 2 python mock libraries, which hasn't been developed since 2004 and is considered obsolete. 4. It spends a while talking about pyfit, which hasn't been worked on since 2006 and is also not commonly used. Now, for my thoughts about the book itself: I decided to give this book a 5 star review because it is an excellent book: - The author writes extremely well, and has a bit of humor throughout the book. - The author covers extensions why TDD is good, how it helps, and how it should be used. - The author describes the different types of testing, and provides clear, intuitive, and thoughtful examples that clearly demonstrate *how to* do the testing. - The author covers extremely detailed setup / installation / configuration of the tools and development environments discussed. The reason why I have to not recommend any readers purchase this book though, is that it is sorely in need of an update. I just finished reading this book (August, 2010), and it is very clear that it is outdated. This book would have been extremely useful two years ago, and maybe also the first quarter of 2009, but agile practices and tools have changed so much since then that this book really needs to be rewritten. My advice to readers who are considering purchasing this book is to do so only if you are aware of what you will be getting, but would like to make use of the author's code examples, writing, and TDD explanations while disregarding the tools used. I really did enjoy reading this book, however, and I really hope that Apress forces Jeff to release a new copy.

Author(s): Jeff Younker
Series: Expert's Voice in Open Source
Edition: 1
Publisher: Apress
Year: 2008

Language: English
Commentary: +OCR
Pages: 417