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Topic: Equivalence partitioning |
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Mithi25
Senior Member Joined: 23Jun2009 Online Status: Offline Posts: 288 |
Topic: Equivalence partitioning Posted: 01Aug2009 at 6:11am |
OverviewEquivalence partitioning is a method for deriving test cases. In this method, classes of input conditions called equivalence classes are identified such that each member of the class causes the same kind of processing and output to occur. In this method, the tester identifies various equivalence classes for partitioning. A class is a set of input conditions that are is likely to be handled the same way by the system. If the system were to handle one case in the class erroneously, it would handle all cases erroneously.
Contents:
Definition
Equivalence partitioning is a software testing technique to minimize
number of permutation and combination of input data. In equivalence
partitioning, data is selected in such a way that it gives as many
different out put as possible with the minimal set of data.
If software behaves in an identical way for a set of value, then the set is termed as equivalence class or a partition. It can be assumed safely that functionality of the software will be same for any data value from the equivalence class or partition. In equivalence partitioning, input data is analyzed and divided into equivalence classes which produces different output. Now, data from these classes can be representative of all the input values that your software expect. For equivalence classes, it can be assumed that software will behave in exactly same way for any data value from the same partition. The TheoryThe testing theory related to equivalence partitioning says that only one test case of each partition is needed to evaluate the behaviour of the program for the related partition. In other words it is sufficient to select one test case out of each partition to check the behaviour of the program. To use more or even all test cases of a partition will not find new faults in the program. The values within one partition are considered to be "equivalent." Thus the number of test cases can be reduced considerably.
An additional effect by applying this technique is that you also find the so called "dirty" test cases. An inexperienced tester may be tempted to use as test cases the input data 1 to 12 for the month and forget to select some out of the invalid partitions. This would lead to a huge number of unnecessary test cases on the one hand, and a lack of test cases for the dirty ranges on the other hand. Types of Equivalence Classes
Why Learn Equivalence Partitioning?Equivalence partitioning drastically cuts down the number of test cases
required to test a system reasonably.
Designing Test Cases Using Equivalence PartitioningTo use equivalence partitioning, you will need to perform two steps STEP 1: IDENTIFY EQUIVALENCE CLASSES Take each input condition described in the specification and derive at least two equivalence classes for it. One class represents the set of cases which satisfy the condition (the valid class) and one represents cases which do not (the invalid class ) Following are some general guidelines for identifying equivalence classes: alue is input to the system and must be within a range of
values, identify one valid class inputs which are within the valid range
and two invalid equivalence classes inputs which are too low and inputs
which are too high. For example, if an item in inventory can have a
quantity of - 9999 to + 9999, identify the following classes: 1. one
valid class: (QTY is greater than or equal to -9999 and is less than or
equal to 9999). This is written as (- 9999 < = QTY < = 9999) 2. the
invalid class (QTY is less than -9999), also written as (QTY < -9999) 3.
the invalid class (QTY is greater than 9999) , also written as (QTY
>9999)
Equivalence partitioning drastically cuts down the number of test cases required to test a system reasonably. It is an attempt to get a good 'hit rate', to find the most errors with the smallest number of test cases. Edited by Mithi25 - 01Aug2009 at 6:12am |
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