Book Image

Software Testing Strategies

By : Matthew Heusser, Michael Larsen
Book Image

Software Testing Strategies

By: Matthew Heusser, Michael Larsen

Overview of this book

Software Testing Strategies covers a wide range of topics in the field of software testing, providing practical insights and strategies for professionals at every level. With equal emphasis on theoretical knowledge and practical application, this book is a valuable resource for programmers, testers, and anyone involved in software development. The first part delves into the fundamentals of software testing, teaching you about test design, tooling, and automation. The chapters help you get to grips with specialized testing areas, including security, internationalization, accessibility, and performance. The second part focuses on the integration of testing into the broader software delivery process, exploring different delivery models and puzzle pieces contributing to effective testing. You’ll discover how to craft your own test strategies and learn about lean approaches to software testing for optimizing processes. The final part goes beyond technicalities, addressing the broader context of testing. The chapters cover case studies, experience reports, and testing responsibilities, and discuss the philosophy and ethics of software testing. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped to elevate your testing game and ensure software quality, and have an indispensable guide to the ever-evolving landscape of software quality assurance.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1:The Practice of Software Testing
9
Part 2:Testing and Software Delivery
14
Part 3:Practicing Politics

Testing functional and legacy code

As we continued with this chapter, we got away from the “dots” on the hexagon and more to lines that run end-to-end. Increasingly, these look like things a customer could understand. As APIs start to look and feel more like actual business functions, it becomes possible to express tests as a table that customers can understand and run. Once it is possible to express functionality in terms a customer can understand, it might make sense to expose it to the customer so that they can see the tests as living documentation. We’ll talk more about this in Chapter 4, where we’ll cover customer-facing tests. Eventually, this may blur the line between developer–facing and customer-facing testing. We are okay with this.

Most of this chapter discussed tests as artifacts – that is, as bits of code. We think of a test as a living exploration of software. Remember that a test written down, institutionalized, and run over...