tailieunhanh - Scripted GUI Testing with Ruby
Scripted GUI Testing with Ruby is a practical, quick-moving tutorial based on real life, and real-world GUI applications. Right out of the gate you'll start working with code to drive a desktop GUI. You'll discover the kinds of gotchas and edge cases that don't exist in simple, toy programs. As you add more tests, you'll learn how to organize your test code and write lucid examples. The result is a series of "smoke tests" team will run on Continuous Integration servers. | -The . ragmatic Programmers Scripted GUI Testing with Ruby Ian Dees Edited by Jaajuetjn Carter Hie Facets of Ruby Series What readers are saying about Scripted GUI Testing with Ruby If you care about your application you care about testing. And if you have an application with a user interface you should care about testing it. This book gives you what you need to start testing in an agile manner using a modern programming language and excellent techniques. This book covers a wide range of GUI testing and should be in every developer s bookshelf. Ola Bini JRuby Core Developer ThoughtWorks This book provides the most thorough and enjoyable introduction to GUI testing in Ruby or any language for that matter I ve yet to encounter. It was not only technically enlightening but a pleasure to read something few technical books achieve. I am tempted to buy copies for every QA tester I know and probably a lot of developers too Thomas Lockney Software Developer Ian Dees brings the joy of Ruby to the task of GUI testing allowing you to let the computers and the people each do what they re good at. Testers and nontesters alike will find value in his discussions of automating GUI actions to both save time and improve quality. David Mullet The Ruby on Windows blog Scripted GUI Testing with Ruby is a must-read for small to mediumsized development shops building any kind of GUI application. Although aimed at the QA segment the book s readability and well-considered refactorings will be a benefit to developers. More important by providing a concrete soup-to-nuts introduction to RSpec it shows a path bridging that crucial gap between product designers and implementors. Ian shows us that a QA s job long-considered monotonous and akin to visiting the dentist can in fact bring clarity of understanding to all members of a project. And even better time and money that would have been wasted on manual click-and-pray testing can now be
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