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Topic: Comparison among Black Box Testing Techniques |
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Author | Message |
yogindernath
Groupie Joined: 27Oct2008 Location: India Online Status: Offline Posts: 52 |
Topic: Comparison among Black Box Testing Techniques Posted: 04Jul2009 at 12:28am |
Testing Effort
Thus we can say that the effort required to identify test cases is lowest in BVA and highest in decision tables. The end result is a trade-off between the test case effort identification and test case execution effort. If we shift our effort toward more sophisticated testing methods, we reduce our test execution time. This is very important as tests are usually executed several times. It may be noted that, judging testing quality in terms of the sheer number of test cases has drawbacks similar to judging programming productivity in terms of lines of code.
It is evident from all the abobve mentioned functional testing strategies that either the functionality is untested or the test cases are redundant. So, gaps do occur in functional test cases and these gaps are reduced by using more sophisticated techniques. We can develop various ratios of total number of test cases generated by method-A to those generated by method-B or even ratios on a test case basis. This is more difficult but sometimes the management may demand numbers even when they have little real meaning. When we see several test cases with the same purpose, sense redundancy, detecting the gaps is quite difficult. If we use only functional testing, the best we can do is to compare the test cases that result from two methods. In general, the more sophisticated method will help us recognize gaps but nothing is guaranted. The easiest choice is 1) Be Dogmatic: We can select a method, use it to generate test cases and then run the test cases. We can improve on this by not being dogmatic and allowing the tester to choose the most appropriate method. We can gain another incremental improvement by devising appropriate hybrid methods. 2) The second choice can be the structural testing techniques for the test effectiveness. It may be noted that the best interpretation for testing effectiveness is most difficult. We would like to know how effective a set of test cases is for finding faults present in a program. This is problematic due to the following two reasons. 1) It presumes that we are aware of the faults in a program. 2) Proving that a program is fault-free is equivalent to the famous halting problem of computer science, which is known to be impossible. Then What is the Best Solution? The best solution is to work backward from fault types. Given a particular kind of fault, we can choose testing methods (functional and structural) that are likely to reveal faults of that type. If we couple this with knowledge of the most likely kinds of faults, we end up with a pragamatic approach to testing effectiveness. This is improved if we track the kinds of faults and their frequencies in the software we develop. http://www.softwaretestinggenius.com/articaldetails.php?mode=details&qry=500&parent=150 |
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