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by hinkley 3743 days ago
I have almost always worked for customers who enjoyed changing their minds arbitrarily and often in ways they swore they would never do.

In the face of grossly changing requirements, I've never had much luck keeping E2E tests up and functioning properly. And people have a bad habit of investing more time and energy than a particular test is worth in trying to keep it working or porting it to the new requirements.

Unit tests are cheap. If the requirements change invalidates twenty of them, you just delete them and write new ones. Easy.