As we all know, continuous integration and agile methodologies
are on the rise, meaning that companies are releasing tons of software
releases – not just in a month, not just in a week, but on a daily
basis. With this increase in releases, it can be extremely difficult to
ensure that you are thoroughly testing every webpage, every visual
element, every User Interface (UI), with every release, and knowing with
certainty that any new code hasn’t broken the appearance and layout of
your application.
So what is the answer to this conundrum?
That’s exactly the question that our friends at Applitools are trying to answer, and they may have cracked the code with their foray into Visual Software Testing.
Visual Software Testing is the process of validating the visual
aspects of an application’s UI. Visual Testing focuses on validating the
layout and appearance of each visual element of the UI and of the UI as
a whole, as well as ensuring that the correct content is displayed.
Layout correctness means that each visual element of the UI is properly
positioned on the screen, that it is of the right shape and size, and
that it does not overlap or hide other visual elements. Appearance
correctness means that the visual elements are of the correct font,
color, or image.
Adam Carmi, one of Applitools’ Co-Founders, conducted research of
image processing algorithms that can imitate a human tester’s eyes and
brain and has come up with a set of algorithms that finally did the
work! Based on those algorithms, they built their tool around the
premise that it must inspect the application’s UI just like a human
does. This means processing entire UI screen images rather than isolated
image fragments or opaque UI objects within the application. Advanced
image analysis is required to reduce false defect detection and to
pinpoint the root cause of detected changes. For example, the tool
automatically categorizes the difference as a content, layout or
appearance defect, and pinpoints the specific UI elements that caused
the defect. Another aspect of a successful visual testing tool is
ensuring that the tool is smart enough to highlight and resolve each
detected change only once – even if it appears in multiple screens of
the application.
The motivation for performing visual testing has grown dramatically
in recent years. Software vendors invest huge amounts of effort, time
and money to design and develop user interfaces that stand out from the
crowd and meet ever increasing customer expectations. Vendors must
verify that their UI correctly displays on an ever-growing variety of
web-browsers, screen resolutions, devices, and form-factors, as even the
smallest UI corruption can result in loss of business. To keep up with
the stresses and agility of continuous integration environments,
software vendors are either going to have to keep performing the
drudgery of manual testing, or move on to the thrills of visual testing!
Source: http://www.qualitestgroup.com/blog/testing-tools/visual-testing-a-necessary-component-to-devops/
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Visual Testing: A Necessary Component to DevOps
Visual Testing: A Necessary Component to DevOps
Reviewed by A
on
11:57 PM
Rating: 5
Reviewed by A
on
11:57 PM
Rating: 5
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