Active TopicsActive Topics  Display List of Forum MembersMemberlist  CalendarCalendar  Search The ForumSearch  HelpHelp
  RegisterRegister  LoginLogin


 One Stop Testing ForumQuality Assurance @ OneStopTestingQuality Methodologies / Streams @ OneStopTesting

Message Icon Topic: Basics in SQA TesTing

Post Reply Post New Topic
Author Message
tanushree
Senior Member
Senior Member
Avatar

Joined: 04Apr2007
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 2160
Quote tanushree Replybullet Topic: Basics in SQA TesTing
    Posted: 01Aug2007 at 6:43am

What is quality? or Define quality?


Lot of quality pioneers defined quality in different ways
A quality product is defined as the one that meets product requirements But Quality can only be seen through customer eyes. So the most important definition of quality is meeting customer needs or Understanding customer requirements, expectations and exceeding those expectations. Customer must be satisfied by using the product, and then it’s a quality product.

 

Affinity Diagram: A group process that takes large amounts of language data, such as developing by brainstorming, and divides it into categories

Audit: This is an inspection/assessment activity that verifies compliance with plans, policies and procedures and ensures that resources are conserved.

Baseline:A quantitative measure of the current level of performance.

Benchmarking: Comparing your company's products, services or processes against best practices or competitive practices, to help define superior performance of a product,service or support processes.

Black-box Testing: A test technique that focuses on testing the functionality of the program component or application against its specifications without knowlegde of how the system constructed.

Boundary value analysis: A data selection technique in which test data is chosen from the "boundaries" of the input or output domain classes, data structures and procedure parameters. Choices often include the actual minimum and maximum boundary values, the maximum value plus or minus one and the minimum value plus or minus one.

Branch Testing: A test method that requires that each possible branch on each decision be executed on at least once.
Brainstorming: A group process for generating creative and diverse ideas.

Bug: A catchall term for all software defects or errors.

Certification testing: Acceptance of software by an authorized agent after the software has been validated by the agent or after its validity has been demonstrated to the agent.

Checkpoint(or verification point): Expected behaviour of the application which must be validated with the actual behaviour after certain action has been performed on the application.

Client: The customer that pays for the product received and receives the benefit from the use of the product.

Condition Coverage: A white-box testing technique that measures the number of or percentage of decision outcomes covered by the test cases designed.100% condition coverage would indicate that every possible outcome of each decision had been executed at least once during testing.

Configuration Management Tools
Tools that are used to keep track of changes made to systems and all related artifacts. These are also known as version control tools.

Configuration testing: Testing of an application on all supported hardware and software platforms.This may include various combinations of hardware types, configuration settings and software versions.

Completeness: A product is said to be complete if it has met all requirements.

Consistency: Adherence to a given set of rules.

Correctness: The extent to which software is free from design and coding defects. It is also the extent to which software meets the specified requirements and user objectives.

Cost of Quality: Money spent above and beyond expected production costs to ensure that the product the customer receives is a quality product. The cost of quality includes prevention, appraisal, and correction or repair costs.

Conversion Testing: Validates the effectiveness of data conversion processes, including field-field mapping and data translation.

Customer: The individual or organization, internal or external to the producing organization that receives the product.

Cyclomatic complexity: The number of decision statements plus one.

Debugging: The process of analysing and correcting syntactic, logic and other errors identified during testing.

Decision Coverage: A white-box testing technique that measures the number of - or percentage - of decision directions executed by the test case designed. 100% Decision coverage would indicate that all decision directions had been executed at least once during testing. Alternatively each logical path through the program can be tested.

Decision Table
A tool for documenting the unique combinations of conditions and associated results in order to derive unique test cases for validation testing.

 

Defect Tracking Tools
Tools for documenting defects as they are found during testing and for
tracking their status through to resolution.

Desk Check: A verification technique conducted by the author of the artifcat to verify the completeness of their own work. This technique does not involve anyone else.

Dynamic Analysis: Analysis performed by executing the program code.Dynamic analysis executes or simulates a development phase product and it detects errors by analyzing the response of the product to sets of input data.

Entrance Criteria: Required conditions and standards for work product quality that must be present or met for entry into the next stage of the software development process.

Equivalence Partitioning: A test technique that utilizes a subset of data that is representative of a larger class. This is done in place of undertaking exhaustive testing of each value of the larger class of data.

Error or defect: 1.A discrepancy between a computed, observed or measured value or condition and the true, specified or theortically correct value or conditon 2.Human action that results in software containing a fault (e.g., omission or misinterpretation of user requirements in a software specification, incorrect translation or omission of a requirement in the design specification)

Error Guessing: Test data selection techniques for picking values that seem likely to cause defects. This technique is based upon the theory that test cases and test data can be developed based on intuition and experience of the tester.

Exhaustive Testing: Executing the program through all possible combination of values for program variables.

Exit criteria: Standards for work product quality which block the promotion of incomplete or defective work products to subsequent stages of the software development process.

Flowchart
Pictorial representations of data flow and computer logic. It is frequently
easier to understand and assess the structure and logic of an application system by

developing a flow chart than to attempt to understand narrative descriptions or verbal explanations. The flowcharts for systems are normally developed manually, while flowcharts of programs can be produced.

Force Field Analysis
A group technique used to identify both driving and restraining forces that
influence a current situation.

Formal Analysis
Technique that uses rigorous mathematical techniques to analyze the
algorithms of a solution for numerical properties, efficiency, and correctness.

Functional Testing
Testing that ensures all functional requirements are met without regard to the final program structure

Histogram
A graphical description of individually measured values in a data set that is organized according to the frequency or relative frequency of occurrence. A histogram illustrates the shape of the distribution of individual values in a data set along with information regarding the average and variation.

Inspection
A formal assessment of a work product conducted by one or more qualified independent reviewers to detect defects, violations of development standards, and other problems. Inspections involve authors only when specific questions concerning deliverables exist. An inspection identifies defects, but does not attempt to correct them. Authors take corrective actions and arrange follow-up reviews as needed.

Integration Testing
This test begins after two or more programs or application components have been successfully unit tested. It is conducted by the development team to validate the interaction or communication/flow of information between the individual components which will be integrated.

Life Cycle Testing
The process of verifying the consistency, completeness, and correctness of software at each stage of the development life cycle.

Pass/Fail Criteria
Decision rules used to determine whether a software item or feature passes or fails a test.

Path Testing
A test method satisfying the coverage criteria that each logical path through the program be tested. Often, paths through the program are grouped into a finite set of classes and one path from each class is tested.

Performance Test
Validates that both the online response time and batch run times meet the
defined performance requirements.

Policy
Managerial desires and intents concerning either process (intended objectives) or products (desired attributes).

Population Analysis
Analyzes production data to identify, independent from the specifications, the types and frequency of data that the system will have to process/produce. This verifies that the specs can handle types and frequency of actual data and can be used to create validation tests.

Procedure
The step-by-step method followed to ensure that standards are met.

Process
1. The work effort that produces a product. This includes efforts of people and equipment guided by policies, standards, and procedures.
2. A statement of purpose and an essential set of practices (activities) that address that purpose.

Proof of Correctness
The use of mathematical logic techniques to show that a relationship between program variables assumed true at program entry implies that another relationship between program variables holds at program exit.

Quality
A product is a quality product if it is defect free. To the producer, a product is a quality product if it meets or conforms to the statement of requirements that defines the product. This statement is usually shortened to: quality means meets requirements. From a customer’s perspective, quality means “fit for use.”

Quality Assurance (QA)
Deals with 'prevention' of defects in the product being developed.It is associated with a process.The set of support activities (including facilitation, training, measurement, and analysis) needed to provide adequate confidence that processes are established and continuously improved to produce products that meet specifications and
are fit for use.

Quality Control (QC)
Its focus is defect detection and removal. Testing is a quality control activity

Quality Improvement
To change a production process so that the rate at which defective products (defects) are produced is reduced. Some process changes may require the product to be changed

Recovery Test
Evaluates the contingency features built into the application for handling
interruptions and for returning to specific points in the application processing cycle, including checkpoints, backups, restores, and restarts. This test also assures that disaster recovery is possible.

Regression Testing
Testing of a previously verified program or application following program
modification for extension or correction to ensure no new defects have been introduced.

Risk Matrix
Shows the controls within application systems used to reduce the identified risk, and in what segment of the application those risks exist. One dimension of the matrix is the risk, the second dimension is the segment of the application system, and within the matrix at the intersections are the controls. For example, if a risk is “incorrect input” and the systems segment is “data entry,” then the intersection within the matrix would show the controls designed to reduce the risk of incorrect input during the data entry segment of the application system.

Scatter Plot Diagram
A graph designed to show whether there is a relationship between two
changing variables.

Standards
The measure used to evaluate products and identify nonconformance. The basis upon which adherence to policies is measured.

Statement of Requirements
The exhaustive list of requirements that define a product.

Statement Testing
A test method that executes each statement in a program at least once during program testing.

Static Analysis
Analysis of a program that is performed without executing the program. It
may be applied to the requirements, design, or code.

Stress Testing
This test subjects a system, or components of a system, to varying
environmental conditions that defy normal expectations. For example, high transaction volume, large database size or restart/recovery circumstances. The intention of stress testing is to identify constraints and to ensure that there are no performance problems.

Structural Testing
A testing method in which the test data is derived solely from the program structure.

Stub
Special code segments that when invoked by a code segment under testing, simulate the behavior of designed and specified modules not yet constructed.

System Test
During this event, the entire system is tested to verify that all functional,
information, structural and quality requirements have been met.

Test Case
Test cases document the input, expected results, and
execution conditions of a given test item.

Test Plan
A document describing the intended scope, approach, resources, and schedule of testing activities. It identifies test items, the features to be tested, the testing tasks, the personnel performing each task, and any risks requiring contingency planning.

Test Scripts
A tool that specifies an order of actions that should be performed during a test session. The script also contains expected results. Test scripts may be manually prepared using paper forms, or may be automated using
capture/playback tools or other kinds of automated scripting tools.

Test Suite Manager
A tool that allows testers to organize test scripts by function or other grouping.

Unit Test
Testing individual programs, modules, or components to demonstrate that the work package executes per specification, and validate the design and technical quality of the application. The focus is on ensuring that the detailed logic within the component is accurate and reliable according to pre-determined specifications. Testing stubs or drivers may be used to simulate behavior of interfacing modules.

Usability Test
The purpose of this event is to review the application user interface and other human factors of the application with the people who will be using the application. This is to ensure that the design (layout and sequence, etc.) enables the business functions to be executed as easily and intuitively as possible. This review includes assuring that the user interface adheres to documented User Interface standards, and should be conducted early in the design stage of development. Ideally, an application prototype is used to walk the client group through various business scenarios, although paper copies of screens, windows, menus, and reports can be used.

User Acceptance Test
User Acceptance Testing (UAT) is conducted to ensure that the system meets the needs of the organization and the end user/customer. It validates that the system will work as intended by the user in the real world, and is based on real world business scenarios, not system requirements. Essentially, this test validates that the right system was built.

Validation
Determination of the correctness of the final program or software produced from a development project with respect to the user needs and requirements.

Verification
1. The process of determining whether the products of a given phase of the software development cycle fulfill the requirements established during the previous phase.
2. The act of reviewing, inspecting, testing, checking, auditing, or otherwise establishing and documenting whether items, processes, services, or documents conform to specified requirements.

Walkthroughs
During a walkthrough, the producer of a product “walks through” or
paraphrases the products content, while a team of other individuals follow along. The team’s job is to ask questions and raise issues about the product that may lead to defect identification.

White-box Testing
A testing technique that assumes that the path of the logic in a program unit or component is known. White-box testing usually consists of testing paths, branch by branch, to produce predictable results. This technique is usually used during tests executed by the development team, such as Unit or Component testing

 




Post Resume: Click here to Upload your Resume & Apply for Jobs

IP IP Logged
Post Reply Post New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



This page was generated in 0.758 seconds.
Vyom is an ISO 9001:2000 Certified Organization

© Vyom Technosoft Pvt. Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions
Job Interview Questions | Placement Papers | Free SMS | Freshers Jobs | MBA Forum | Learn SAP | Web Hosting