David Brown wrote:
It's not a previous test that fails, but one that you have to write as
part of the existing checkin.  In other words, all commits must
include a test that passes, and if the test is run against the current
basline, it must fail.

I see. Every checkin has to have *more* tests that pass that didn't pass last time. Very cool idea, especially on a project you know is going to get big when you start (and which you have some idea of what you want it to do when you're done). :-)

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Darren New / San Diego, CA, USA (PST)

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