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Home/ Questions/Q 1002843
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T07:53:12+00:00 2026-05-16T07:53:12+00:00

We have a project that is starting to get large, and we need to

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We have a project that is starting to get large, and we need to start applying Unit Tests as we start to refactor. What is the best way to apply unit tests to a project that already exists? I’m (somewhat) used to doing it from the ground up, where I write the tests in conjunction with the first lines of code onward. I’m not sure how to start when the functionality is already in place. Should I just start writing test for each method from the repository up? Or should I start from the Controllers down?

update:
to clarify on the size of the project.. I’m not really sure how to describe this other than to say there’s 8 Controllers and about 167 files that have a .cs extension, all done over about 7 developer months..

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T07:53:12+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 7:53 am

    As you seem to be aware, retrofitting testing into an existing project is not easy. Your method of writing tests as you go is the better way. Your problem is one of both process and technology- tests must be required by everyone or no one will use them.

    The recommendation I’ve heard and agree with is that you should not attempt to wrap tests around an existing codebase all at once. You’ll never finish. Start by working testing into your bugfix process- every fixed bug gets a test. This will start to work testing into your existing code over time. New code must always have tests, of course. Eventually, you’ll get the coverage up to a reasonable percentage, but it will take time.

    One good book I’ve had recommended to me is Working Effectively With Legacy Code by Michael C. Feathers. The title doesn’t really demonstrate it, but working testing into an existing codebase is a major subject of the book.

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