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Topic: Introduction to BlackBox Testing Techniques |
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Author | Message |
yogindernath
Groupie Joined: 27Oct2008 Location: India Online Status: Offline Posts: 52 |
Topic: Introduction to BlackBox Testing Techniques Posted: 14Jul2009 at 10:03pm |
Firstly let us understand the meaning of Black Box Testing. The term 'Black Box' refers to the software, which is treated as a black box. By treating it as a black box, we mean that the system or source code is not checked at all. It is done from customer's viewpoint. The test engineer engaged in black box testing only knows the set of inputs and expected outputs and is unaware of how those inputs are transformed into outputs by the software. Types of Black Box Testing Techniques: Following techniques are used for performing black box testing 1) Boundary Value Analysis (BVA) 2) Equivalence Class Testing 4) Cause-Effect Graphing Technique This testing technique believes and extends the concept that the density of defect is more towards the boundaries. This is done to the following reasons a) Usually the programmers are not able to decide whether they have to use <= operator or < operator when trying to make comparisons. b) Different terminating conditions of For-loops, While loops and Repeat loops may cause defects to move around the boundary conditions.
c) The requirements themselves may not be clearly understood, especially around the boundaries, thus causing even the correctly coded program to not perform the correct way. Strongly typed languages such as Ada and Pascal permit explicit definition of variable ranges. Other languages such as COBOL, FORTRAN and C are not strongly typed, so boundary value testing is more appropriate for programs coded in such languages. 2) Equivalence Class Testing: The use of equivalence classes as the basis for functional testing is appropriate in situations like
Decision tables are a precise and compact way to model complicated logic. Out of all the functional testing methods, the ones based on decision tables are the most rigorous due to the reason that the decision tables enforce logical rigour. Decision tables are ideal for describing situations in which a number of combinations of actions are taken under varying sets of conditions. This is basically a hardware testing technique adapted to software testing. It considers only the desired external behavior of a system. This is a testing technique that aids in selecting test cases that logically relate Causes (inputs) to Effects (outputs) to produce test cases.
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