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Software Test Design

You're reading from   Software Test Design Write comprehensive test plans to uncover critical bugs in web, desktop, and mobile apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804612569
Length 426 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Simon Amey Simon Amey
Author Profile Icon Simon Amey
Simon Amey
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Preparing to Test
2. Chapter 1: Making the Most of Exploratory Testing FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Writing Great Feature Specifications 4. Chapter 3: How to Run Successful Specification Reviews 5. Chapter 4: Test Types, Cases, and Environments 6. Part 2 – Functional Testing
7. Chapter 5: Black-Box Functional Testing 8. Chapter 6: White-Box Functional Testing 9. Chapter 7: Testing of Error Cases 10. Chapter 8: User Experience Testing 11. Chapter 9: Security Testing 12. Chapter 10: Maintainability 13. Part 3 – Non-Functional Testing
14. Chapter 11: Destructive Testing 15. Chapter 12: Load Testing 16. Chapter 13: Stress Testing 17. Conclusion
18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix – Example Feature Specification

Testing information display

Keep the screens that display information as simple as possible. To return to the theme of this chapter, less is more. This is easy to say, and the more egregious violations of this principle are easy to spot. The trick is seeing them early enough and finding even the mildest of examples. This is a large subject and deserves a dedicated team to focus on it. Here, I will only cover some simple examples to look out for while testing, but I thoroughly recommend reading further on this fascinating subject. Within the Packt library there is Practical UX Design by Scott Farnanella or Hands-On UX Design for Developers by Elvis Canziba.

Real-world example – Too many axes

One company I worked for produced an internal tool in which graphs of network activity had eight different axes, all plotted on the same chart. Sending bandwidth, receiving bandwidth, packet loss, jitter, and latency all had lines that were superimposed over each other by default. If...

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