Josh Bones
Aug 22, 2017 · 1 min read

Couldn’t agree more. If you want your product to be successful you need to build on a solid foundation. If it really takes off and you have no tests you’ll either

  1. Have to go back an write a bunch of tests which is deadly boring and slows you down. Plus, post-hoc testing is way less effective.
  2. Continue development without tests and eventually get mired down by constant bug fixing as the project complexity increases.

As you said Barry, it could work, but I’ve never seen it work in practice.

)

    Josh Bones

    Written by