Author: Matthew

  • If you want to cut a bolt, use a bolt cutter

    I saw an EDS ad in Forbes today which had what I thought was an interesting tagline:

    You can talk about it.
    You can think about it.
    You can hope for it.
    But if you actually want to cut a bolt, use a bolt cutter.

    This is so true. Yet as a software developer, this is something I tend to forget. I can blog all day about how wonderful Ruby is, but if I really want to prove its worth I should be willing to do something with it. Likewise, if I haven’t actually created something in C#, I have no basis for commenting on the language, either negatively or positively. Experience breeds credibility and authority.

    Don’t just talk about cutting a bolt. Get out that bolt cutter and use it!

  • Free and easy way to convert Word docs to PDFs

    If you’re like me, you’ve run into situation after situation in which you’d like to convert a Word document to a PDF. While Googling for a tool to do this, though, I inevitably end up drowning in page after page of supposedly “free” converters which cost $30+ to unlock. Come on, $30 to do a simple conversion? This is the era of open source. There has to be a better way.

    Actually, there is. One way would be to install OpenOffice. It allows you to save a document directly to a PDF. This makes so much sense, doesn’t it? Which brings to mind another question… when will Microsoft add a similar feature to Word?

    If you don’t want to wait around for them to do that (and don’t have the inclination to install OpenOffice), check out these instructions for converting to a PDF by printing to a file and using a couple of free tools. It was quick and easy for me, and now I have my PDF and my $30.

  • Think video games are just for the young?

    Read about a 69-year-old grandmother who has two passions: cooking and… gaming. Yes, gaming. There are 17 game consoles in her residence. Just goes to show you that no matter how old you get, you can always find a good creative way to waste extraordinary amounts of time!

  • Reconstructing web sites from cached data

    This paper written by a quartet of guys from the CS department at Old Dominion is quite fascinating. They present a software solution for recovering and reconstructing web sites from various Internet archive sources and cached search engine data. The tool is called Warrick and, while I expect I’ll never have to use it, it’s nice to know it’s there if needed.

    If nothing else, the paper gives a good overview of how web site caching actually works. And their description of the tool is quite intriguing. They must have spent a good deal of time on it.

  • Watir tips and tricks

    I’ve been using Watir for a week or so now and have (naturally) run into a couple of problems. I’ve also come up with a handy way to reference fields on a page. I thought I’d share these tips so others won’t have to spend their precious time working through ’em as I had to do.

    Problem: Watir doesn’t respect maxLength

    The first problem I found is that Watir doesn’t respect the maxLength attribute on a text field. It will happily enter 20 characters into a text field with a maxLength of 10 without complaining. This can cause problems with assertions and such. I was able to override Watir’s set(..) method with code which will throw an exception if the string to be entered into the text field exceeds the maxLength.

    Just add this code to your script if you want the same warning to show up:

    class Watir::TextField
      alias_method :set_value, :set
        def set(value)
          if (value.size > maxLength)
            fail(“The length of the string < "#{value}"> exceeds ” +
              “the max length (#{maxLength}) of the “#{name}” text field.”)
          end
        set_value(value)
      end
    end

    Problem: Watir doesn’t yet handle JavaScript alerts

    Another problem I ran into was Watir’s inability to handle JavaScript alerts and pop-ups. (It can handle pop-up browser windows fine, just not windows created with JavaScript’s alert(..) function.) There currently isn’t a very good workaround for this, but the Watir folks are working on a solution for the next release. In the meantime, they suggest using a tool call AutoIt in conjunction with Watir to automate interaction with the pop-ups. I haven’t tried this method yet.

    Tip: Abstract out textual references to page elements

    The site I’m using Watir to test changes quite frequently. I have no guarantee that a specific page element will be named the same thing for any length of time. Why, then, would I want to scatter references to the element throughout my Watir tests and be forced to change all of the references anytime the element itself is changed? My solution was to abstract out the common attributes of the element so that each element is only defined once. Then, whenever an element changes, I only have to change a single reference.

    Ruby’s “method_missing” idiom made it very, very easy to do this. I simply defined a parent for all of my test cases and added the following method definition to it:

    def method_missing(method)
      key = method.id2name
      super unless page_objects.has_key?(key)
      args = page_objects[key]
      return @ie.send(args[0], args[1], args[2])
    end

    Do you see what this does? Whenever a method which doesn’t exist in a subclass is called, method_missing is passed the name of the (non-existent) method. I take that name and use it as a key in a hash which I expect to be returned by a method called “page_objects” which is defined in a subclass. If the key exists, I grab the object from the hash and use it to call a method on Watir’s IE object (Ruby’s “send” method is the equivalent of an “exec” in other langages… it just allows strings to be interpreted as method calls and arguments).

    I then define the “page_objects” method in each of my subclasses like so:

    def page_objects
      {
      “field1” => [:text_field, :id, “my_field”],
      “field2” => [:text_field, :id, “another_field”]
      }
    end

    I can then simply reference “field1” and “field2” as if they were instance variables of my subclass. For example:

    def test_example
      field1.setContents(“Hello world”)
      assert_equal(“Booyah”, field2.getContents)
    end

    The calls to “field1” and “field2” are handled by “method_missing” since those methods don’t exist, and the magic then proceeds from there. If the actual ID of either field changes, I simply make the change in my “page_objects” method and my existing tests should all continue working. This indirection follows the DRY principle (Don’t Repeat Yourself).

    This trick would almost impossible to accomplish in Java without a large amount of bulky reflection code. Just another example of why dynamic typing is so nice.

    Hope you find this idiom as useful as I have. Happy Watir-ing!

  • 20.weeks.ago

    Another example why Ruby is generally the best choice when you want to get something up and running fast with a minimum amount of code and a maximum amount of clarity.

    Dion Almaer’s 20.weeks.ago vs. java.util.Calendar

  • Watir: Web Application Testing in Ruby

    WATIR stands for “Web Application Testing in Ruby”. Watir is a free, open-source functional testing tool for automating browser-based tests of web applications. It is pronounced water.

    I began experimenting with Watir over the weekend. I run a database-driven web site for a local non-profit group and have been looking for a good way to functionally test the site with a minimum time investment in a particular framework. I’ve had bad experiences with HtmlUnit and HttpUnit in the past and wanted a way to code the tests in Ruby. I’ve been told that the state of Watir a year ago was really awful, but apparently they’ve made lots of improvements since then because I didn’t have any trouble getting up and running.

    As a test writer, most of your interaction with Watir takes placed through the IE object which lets you open a specific URL and then make assertions about what the page should look like. Watir’s flexibility in looking up data on the page is phenomenal. You can do lookups by name, ID, position, and so on. The pages I’ve tested thus far contain light JavaScript so I’m not sure how well Watir performs on pages with heavy scripting, but for my purposes Watir made it quick and easy to write tests that didn’t contain an enourmous amount of code, yet were powerful enough to thoroughly verify the functionality of my web app.

    Couple Watir with ActiveRecord and you have a powerful way to verify that data on the backend is getting written and updated correctly from your web application.

    I highly recommend you check out Watir for your next project. If you end up using it, feel free to share your thoughts about it by posting a comment here or e-mailing me directly. I’d enjoy hearing from you.

  • An incredibly geeky display of Christmas lighting prowess

    Someone just sent me a link to this video. How amazingly geeky. Yet another case where I’m wondering why people like this have so much extra time on their hands. There has to be an explanation!

  • Sails: Simplifying Java web apps

    Sails: a dynamic, open-source web framework for Java designed in the spirit of Rails.

    The top 5 reasons to use it?

    1. Created using test-driven development (no, seriously, it was!)
    2. Controllers are testable (oh yeah)
    3. Leans heavily on convention over configuration (Rails anyone?)
    4. Binds URLs to Actions on Controllers and renders their templates (sure wish Struts would do this sans XML)
    5. Converts objects into Strings and Strings into objects (sure, Struts does this, but Sails does it better)

    Born out of a software project some of my old co-workers from RoleModel Software are currently working on, this framework appears to be quite slick, but is still in its infancy. My experience with it so far has been limited, but I like what I see. I encourage you to at least poke around the Sails web site and read up on the framework.

  • Cleaning up on the web with AJAX

    Forbes.com hops on the AJAX bandwagon with a brief overview of what some new businesses are using it for. I found the point at the end about AJAX impacting Nielsen/NetRatings statistics particularly interesting.