Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming Question regarding a book for C++ Post 303020739 by Corona688 on Thursday 26th of July 2018 11:47:02 AM
Old 07-26-2018
C is the underpinnings for C++. If you do not understand C, your understanding of C++ will be poor. Most people skip it... and most programmers are poor.
This User Gave Thanks to Corona688 For This Post:
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Good book

I just want to know if someone can tell me if this book "C Programming Language (2nd Edition) by Brian W. Kernighan, Dennis M. Ritchie" is a good book to learn C on unix/linux ??? i'm an old (33 :)) mainframe programmer who wants to learn something else besides cobol and pl/1 ...... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pat
2 Replies

2. HP-UX

HP-UX Internals Book

. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Driver
2 Replies

3. Solaris

e-book

Hi everybody I a new one And I have just wanted to research on Sun Solaris So can you help me what e-book to read ( and if can you give me the direct address to load ) Thks so much (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: iwbasts
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Book and Links about Shells; and zsh question

HI, I would like to ask You about some good books or links where I can find information about shells, theoretical information. I will be grateful if You can help me And I have question about zsh loop trivial script: #!/bin/zsh for i in {1..100000} do echo $i; doneexec time is 10... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Physix
9 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

looking for a book suggestion

On the basic concepts of programming. I mean I am 100% self taught so I need a book to fix all my bad habits and misconceptions. I mean I want a solid book over the basics. Explains what an array is, a string, variable, stacks, and so forth. I only know how to write code in shell,... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: tlarkin
7 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Is this a typo in my Book?

I'm currently learning Bash scripting from a book and the following example is given, but I think there is a typo in the variable assignment for the variable file. $ cat test5 #!/bin/bash # reading values from a file file=“states” ( shouldn't this be file=`cat states` assuming you... (23 Replies)
Discussion started by: Riker1204
23 Replies

7. AIX

A book for sysadmin

Please i searching a book which covering system administration of aix7 or 6 :lvm,virtualization,fs,etc Ebook and amazon ok. Do you know something good? Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Linusolaradm1
1 Replies
HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Testing(3pm) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Testing(3pm)

NAME
HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Testing - testing forms VERSION
version 0.40013 SYNOPSIS
Manual Index One of the big advantages of FormHandler compared to many other form packages is that you can test the same form that you use in your controller. DESCRIPTION
It's difficult to test forms that are instantiated in controllers with 'add_element' calls and from YAML, and that have no form class. It's one of the reasons that 'dynamic' forms generated with a field_list aren't a good idea for anything except the simplest forms. If you have a form class that contains everything that is needed for processing the form, it's really really easy to create tests for forms. Look in the FormHandler 't' directory. It's full of tests for forms. You can test that the validations work, that the database is getting updated correctly, even that the HTML that's being rendered is correct. If something isn't working correctly, it's ten times easier to debug in a test case than sitting in a controller somewhere. And when you finally start up your application and use the form, there should be very few surprises. FormHandler provides a simple function to test whether the HTML output is correct, 'is_html' in HTML::FormHandler::Test, which uses HTML::TreeBuilder. If you need to build forms that use the rendering code to produce particular output, it can be helpful. Example Here's an example of a test, originally copied from one of the DBIC model tests. But you should download the tar.gz or checkout the distribution from github and browse through the tests. use Test::More; use lib 't/lib'; use_ok( 'BookDB::Form::Book'); use_ok( 'BookDB::Schema::DB'); my $schema = BookDB::Schema::DB->connect('dbi:SQLite:t/db/book.db'); ok($schema, 'get db schema'); my $form = BookDB::Form::Book->new(schema => $schema); # This is munging up the equivalent of param data from a form my $good = { 'title' => 'How to Test Perl Form Processors', 'author' => 'I.M. Author', 'genres' => [2, 4], 'format' => 2, 'isbn' => '123-02345-0502-2' , 'publisher' => 'EreWhon Publishing', }; ok( $form->process( params => $good ), 'Good data' ); my $book = $form->item; END { $book->delete }; ok ($book, 'get book object from form'); my $num_genres = $book->genres->count; is( $num_genres, 2, 'multiple select list updated ok'); is( $form->field('format')->value, 2, 'get value for format' ); my $bad_1 = { notitle => 'not req', silly_field => 4, }; ok( !$form->process( $bad_1 ), 'bad 1' ); my $bad_2 = { 'title' => "Another Silly Test Book", 'author' => "C. Foolish", 'year' => '1590', 'pages' => 'too few', 'format' => '22', }; ok( !$form->process( $bad_2 ), 'bad 2'); ok( $form->field('year')->has_errors, 'year has error' ); ok( $form->field('pages')->has_errors, 'pages has error' ); ok( !$form->field('author')->has_errors, 'author has no error' ); ok( $form->field('format')->has_errors, 'format has error' ); my $good = { title => "Another Silly Test Book", author => "C. Foolish", year => 1999, pages => 101, format => 2 }; ok( $form->process($good), 'now form validates' ); done_testing; AUTHOR
FormHandler Contributors - see HTML::FormHandler COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Gerda Shank. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-06-25 HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Testing(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:36 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy