Who’s saying this? Other programmers or management?
Programmers might listen to reason, but might be very set in their ways. Some that don’t want it might even sabotage it and write crap tests that don’t do shit like test that true == true
or skip all of them. Know your crowd. If it’s a crowd that like copying the latest and greatest, quote something google or facebook did or said. If they’re old-school, find some old-ass programmer that loves tests.
Management listen to money unless they’re incompetent. Calculate the time it took to resolve certain bugs, estimate the hourly-rate of people, compare that to how much time it takes to write tests, but make it clear that not all bugs can be caught. Maybe even find an article or blog from some manager/CTO/technical lead at another company talking about how bug count dropped or something.
If it’s a free for all, add tests yourself.
If they’re overbearing, bro, look for another job. A bad culture fit is a bad culture fit and there’s no need to fight that. It’ll be a learning experience too: not everybody can be convinced and not every company is for you.
lysdexic@programming.dev 11 months ago
By definition, automated testing means paying more attention, and doing it so well that the process is automated.
Show them a working test that’s catching UI bugs. It’s hard to argue against facts.
Cralder@feddit.nu 11 months ago
Ooooh you wouldn’t believe how easy it is for some people to argue against facts.