This is not a bug, but a feature", "This is not for me", "But it doesn't reproduce for me" - sounds familiar, right? As a tester, I can choose how and what to test, and then - how to tell the developers about what I found. They, of course, will not miss the opportunity to say that these are not bugs, but features - and quickly close the bug reports. Let's figure out why this happens from the point of view of modern neurophysiology and what we, as testers, can do to ensure that bugs are fixed, and developers do not see us as enemies.
Natalia Yakhina, DataArt
I am talking about ETL systems. What are they? Where are they used? You will get acquainted with approaches to testing ETL systems, learn secrets and life hacks for increasing the efficiency of fusion database tests. The report will be useful both for those who already work with such applications and for those who have never heard of them and would like to expand their horizons.
Dmitry Khashchinin, Neoflex
I will talk about testing automation, share my experience of working on a project without manual testing, and also talk about the PLAT-ON library, which allows you to quickly and easily start developing automated tests.
Sergey Ruzin, Quantori
My talk is about a framework for BDD automation. We will consider its advantages, examples using Specflow, argument transformation, and how its implementation allows you to get rid of static Page Objects and makes life easier when testing.
It's not a bug, it's a feature!" and other excuses from developers
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