A DeveloperTest is the correct name for what the industry generally calls a UnitTest. It is a test written for developers, as distinct from an AcceptanceTest or CustomerTest, written for the OnsiteCustomer''''''s. (See Also ProgrammerTest) : The industry generally considers a UnitTest to be the smallest piece of testable code which is tested in isolation from its dependencies. If a DeveloperTest is not that then a DeveloperTest can't be the correct name for what the industry generally calls a UnitTest. A DeveloperTest sounds more like what Gerard Meszaros calls a ComponentTest (i.e. not as isolated as a UnitTest, but smaller than an IntegrationTest). A UnitTest might be a CustomerTest, if the Customer has specified a super-high level of rigor, such as for medical, avionics, high finance, etc. A UnitTest only tests details in strict isolation from each other. To test an object, you must replace all its dependencies with MockObject''''''s. This is so the failure of one UnitTest implicates one and only one unit. Under TestDrivenDevelopment, the failure of a DeveloperTest should implicate only the last edit. (Tip: Revert it!) This is why DeveloperTest''''''s should ''not'' abuse MockObject''''''s. Each test case can cross more than one module, providing cross-testing. ---- CategoryTesting