| Updated: 10/5/2002; 9:49:59 AM. |
| A QA Guy's Radio Weblog Thoughts from Dave Liebreich Benefits of Developers Running Through the Test Cases
Here are two possible benefits of having developers execute the test cases while the tester watches: 1. The developer learns more about the actual testing process, and may end up being easier to work with. 2. The tester may be exposed to power-user techniques, and become a more efficient user of the system. It Takes Longer to Test When There Are Defects
Well, duh! But I'm thinking more along the lines of presenting time/effort estimates of the testing process to project management. If it takes 10 minutes to run a test case from scratch to completion, and there are 6 test cases, then it will take 1 hour to run all the test cases. If there are no defects found. Let's say that it takes 20 minutes to write up a bug, and between 5-20 minutes to research it. Severe bugs take 2x time (on average), and trivial bugs take .5x time.
So, using these made-up numbers, each trivial bug found adds 20 minutes to the total test time, each average bug adds 40 minutes, and each severe bug adds 80 minutes.
9:19:44 AM
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||