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Software Testing Strategies

You're reading from   Software Testing Strategies A testing guide for the 2020s

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837638024
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Matthew Heusser Matthew Heusser
Author Profile Icon Matthew Heusser
Matthew Heusser
Michael Larsen Michael Larsen
Author Profile Icon Michael Larsen
Michael Larsen
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:The Practice of Software Testing
2. Chapter 1: Testing and Designing Tests FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Fundamental Issues in Tooling and Automation 4. Chapter 3: Programmer-Facing Testing 5. Chapter 4: Customer-Facing Tests 6. Chapter 5: Specialized Testing 7. Chapter 6: Testing Related Skills 8. Chapter 7: Test Data Management 9. Part 2:Testing and Software Delivery
10. Chapter 8: Delivery Models and Testing 11. Chapter 9: The Puzzle Pieces of Good Testing 12. Chapter 10: Putting Your Test Strategy Together 13. Chapter 11: Lean Software Testing 14. Part 3:Practicing Politics
15. Chapter 12: Case Studies and Experience Reports 16. Chapter 13: Testing Activities or a Testing Role? 17. Chapter 14: Philosophy and Ethics in Software Testing 18. Chapter 15: Words and Language About Work 19. Chapter 16: Testing Strategy Applied 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

A coverage dashboard

One of our examples from Chapter 9 was a coverage dashboard. It’s easy enough to pop off a dashboard without explaining how it came to be or was used. So, we’ll tell the story of how we developed a real dashboard in more depth, using an example from a company that provides supplies to retail stores. This particular project involved developing a web-based eCommerce frontend so that the customers – the retail stores – could self-service their orders.

Before the dashboard, testing was relatively undocumented. Each person would offer to take a different browser, and we would reconnect at noon to discuss progress. Comments would likely be “Firefox looks pretty good,” and so on. There was neither a good discussion of how deeply things were tested, nor on what bugs were found. For that matter, exactly what we were supposed to be testing was changing frequently – there was no source of truth for requirements.

To create...

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