Markus Gärtner

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Markus Gärtner

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Born
in Bielefeld, Germany
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Member Since
December 2011

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Markus Gärtner works as an Agile tester, trainer, coach and consultant with it-agile GmbH, Hamburg, Germany. Markus founded the German Agile Testing and Exploratory workshop in 2011, is one of the founders of the European chapter in Weekend Testing, a black-belt instructor in the Miagi-Do school of Software Testing, contributes to the Agile Alliance FTT-Patterns writing community as well as the Software Craftsmanship movement. Markus regularly presents at Agile and testing conferences all over the globe, as well as dedicating himself to writing about testing, foremost in an Agile context.

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Markus Gärtner Keep practicing. Don't care too much about feedback, since you will need practice, practice, practice to going. After a long while, you may receive no…moreKeep practicing. Don't care too much about feedback, since you will need practice, practice, practice to going. After a long while, you may receive notes from your readers. Don't overemphasize this feedback - may it be positive or negative. You are learning a new skill. That needs practice, and keep in mind that it's your unique view on the world that produces your writings.(less)
Markus Gärtner Together with my friend Matt Heusser I am working on Save our Scrum, a Scrum self-help book. The essence will be to provide examples of problems that …moreTogether with my friend Matt Heusser I am working on Save our Scrum, a Scrum self-help book. The essence will be to provide examples of problems that Scrum may expose, and provide real world examples on how folks solved some of these problems in our case studies.

We expect to make some progress on it during 2015. So, stay tuned.(less)
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More books by Markus Gärtner…

Inline-Method refactoring considered under-valued

If you are like me and fell into programmer without proper introductions to the tools of the trade, you may have always wondered what those fancy options in the refactoring menu of your IDE are. One of the refactorings I often-times under-value and under-appreciate is the Inline refactoring. In a recent video from Arjan Egges on his YouTube channel I was reminded about the power that this refactor

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Published on April 21, 2025 12:17

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Markus Gärtner wrote a new blog post

Inline-Method refactoring considered under-valued

If you are like me and fell into programmer without proper introductions to the tools of the trade, you may have always wondered what those fancy opti Read more of this blog post »
More of Markus's books…
76491 Stoos — 221 members — last activity Sep 28, 2013 08:08AM
We believe our work should be making the world better, not making do 'til retirement; energising, respectful, valuable, joyful. We are an internationa ...more



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