John Hughes has been a functional programming enthusiast for more than thirty years, at the Universities of Oxford, Glasgow, and since 1992 Chalmers University in Gothenburg, Sweden. He served on the Haskell design committee, co-chairing the committee for Haskell 98, and is the author of more than 75 papers, including "Why Functional Programming Matters", one of the classics of the area. With Koen Claessen, he created QuickCheck, the most popular testing tool among Haskell programmers, and in 2006 he founded Quviq to commercialise the technology using Erlang.
Software Passion: Making hard stuff easy with functional programming.
Links:
Twitter: http://twitter.com/rjmh
Homepage: www.cs.chalmers.se/~rjmh
Research Group: http://wiki.portal.chalmers.se/cse/pmwiki.php/FP/FP
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Presentation: "Race Conditions, Distribution, Interactions--Testing the Hard Stuff and Staying Sane"Time: Friday 09:20 - 10:20 Location: To be announced
Abstract:
Even the best test suites can't entirely prevent nasty surprises: race conditions, unexpected interactions, faults in distributed protocols and so on, still slip past them into production. Yet writing even more tests of the same kind quickly runs into diminishing returns. I'll talk about new automated techniques that can dramatically improve your testing, letting you focus on what your code should do, rather than which cases should be tested--with plenty of war stories from the likes of Ericsson, Volvo Cars, and Basho Technologies, to show how these new techniques really enable us to nail the hard stuff. |
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