Depends on the test design - most are poor black box examples, but a white
box test will effectively debug your code. But white box is not commercially
viable, probably only see it in safety critical systems.

John

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Konstantin Ignatyev" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Tapestry users" <tapestry-user@jakarta.apache.org>
Sent: Monday, December 12, 2005 3:50 PM
Subject: Re: tapestry to JSF conversion


> Tests cannot prove that code is bug free. It is simple
> as that.
>
> They definitely help, but not that much
>
> --- Erik Hatcher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >
> > On Dec 8, 2005, at 3:19 PM, Leonardo Quijano
> > Vincenzi wrote:
> > > (now, maybe Ruby's not a strict scripting
> > language... but it's not
> > > strong.. and I don't like that! It just produces
> > buggy code, IMO)
> >
> > In other words,  you don't write unit tests.
> >
> > Erik
> >
> >
> >
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