Because the examples are used to drive development and automated testing, the documentation is never out of date. If the tests pass, the documentation is accurate.
Specification by Example replaces vague "shall" statements with concrete scenarios. Instead of saying, "The system should handle tiered discounts," a team practicing SbE would create a table: Gold | Order Value: $100 | Discount: 20% Customer Type: Silver | Order Value: $100 | Discount: 10% These examples serve three purposes simultaneously: Requirement: They define what the system should do. Test: They provide the exact criteria for success. Specification by Example
is a collaborative approach to defining requirements and functional tests based on capturing and clarifying requirements using realistic examples instead of abstract statements. It bridges the communication gap between business stakeholders, developers, and testers, ensuring that the software being built aligns perfectly with business goals. The Core Problem: The Translation Gap Because the examples are used to drive development
They act as a living manual for how the system works. Key Benefits Instead of saying, "The system should handle tiered
In traditional software development, requirements are often captured in lengthy, ambiguous documents. By the time these requirements pass from a business analyst to a developer and finally to a QA engineer, the original intent is often lost. This "telephone game" leads to rework, bugs, and features that don't actually solve the user's problem. How SbE Works