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Closed 10 years ago.
Does someone know a free web-based test case management software? I looked around in the internet and on some comparisons, but either they are expensive as hell or looking bad as hell ... (basic HTML tables).
Thanks for your hints!
I also tried for same but as u said no tool can fulfill requirements so i am using Test Point Metrics approach. It is best approach in any environment. By this approach not only we can do unit and integration testing but also validate the requirements. Time for writing Test Point Metrics is just after the Requirement understanding
A template of Test Point Metrics available here:
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/80205542/Test-Plan
And a comprehensive review on such tools available here:
http://www.opensourcetesting.org/testmgt.php
Related
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Closed 9 years ago.
At the moment, I write a WCF Service that gives the following functionality:
Videoupload and -download
Usermanagement
Groupmanagement
Filemanagement
A forum
Presencemanagement
As database I use a SQL Server 2012 from Microsoft.
The service gets called via REST, so this would not be the problem.
My question is, what advantage can I get with node.js or better said, is there any advantage?
The biggest advantage is in my point of view, that I am fully platform indipendent. Are there any other advantages?
Greets Knerd
Update, I posted a new question here https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/188926/migrate-wcf-to-node-js
You get the usual advantages and disadvantages Node.js has.
I.e.:
Platform independence
Everything is asynchronous
You have the same language for the backend as for the HTML frontend
...
Basically, the question whether you can benefit from Node.js IMHO comes down to whether you need to scale pretty much, and if you have lots of I/O to do.
If the answer to both is 'yes' then Node.js may be a pretty good catch for you.
PS: Completely off-topic, but - are you Knerd from the discussion forum of winfuture.de?
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Closed 10 years ago.
Can someone let me know the pros and cons or using Jira and/or Google docs for Agile sprints?
We are team of 8 developers and planning to switch to either Jira or google docs.
We currently use white board for sprint stories....
Thanks
To be honest it would be like comparing one of the old cellphones to the new smartphone- it's true you could use both to make a call, but on a smartphone you could do so much more.. the list of Jira's pros is long, and i don't think that the Google docs have any major pros over Jira, except it's free.
You can try jira for free to evaluate it, just get it from http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/overview.
If you are using it for agile planing, be aware that Jira itself is lacking many of the agile dearly needed properties, but they offer an expansion called green-hopper which add a lot of power and help with the agile management.
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Closed 9 years ago.
I am interested in writing a small automatic trader for the forex market. I would like to chose my own tools (platform and programming language) and I just need to find a decent API to query the numbers and that accepts requests for trading actions.
I guess the ideal would be some web service with a XML API, or similar.
Any ideas?
Check out the InteractiveBrokers API or the Cunningham T4 API. Both are really good, although I'm not exactly sure T4 allows forex trading.
MT4 is the industry standard. It allows simple interface through .dll files and has an extensive support base.
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Closed 11 years ago.
I have done some research and found test plan over 40 pages. It includes so many elements that it is difficult to keep track. Additionally, it is not provided any examples, just a description of the different tests such as acceptance test, system test, etc. If anyone have made some good and simple test plan for the development of a product and could share, so that I can gain inspiration with example would be very helpful.
yeah, i find that a pain to when i just want to do the thing, and people explain around it - im like "just bloody show me an example template i can rip off!"
this is why i write my articles with a pragmatic approach (e.g. Writing a System Test Plan)
its short, has an explanation of the reasoning behind the test structure, and gives the actual template
-- LM
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Closed 13 years ago.
I recently got interested in web development coming from kernel based applications. I am curious to what the best development environment and language that one can use to build a nice looking website. I have a distant familiarity with PHP, CSS and the like but I am comfortable with HTML.
To be perfectly frank: it doesn't really matter.
As long as it produces useful HTML, CSS, and perhaps JavaScript, you can have a beautiful website (and you can also produce bad websites!). The development environment is purely a matter of taste for the programmers.
As long as you are disciplined and attack the project with a plan, know a good designer or two, and have the will power to see it through till the end, you'll be successful.