I've been aware of this tool for quite a while,
and shown it to some other devs around
here. I think it's awesome, but I have not had a need for it yet. I think the visual
editor
may present some cases where this makes sense
Just being curious, can you elaborate
on that? From my experience (I tried TinyMCE on MediaWiki ;), would it not be easier to
compare the code a visual editor produces with the result of the preview mode? I assume it
could easier be done by comparing the DOM branches, using QUnit or Selenium instead of
images.
- but generally it seems the most useful for writing
tests that involved taking several input
actions and expecting a consistent result.
I agree. I thought more about testing
skin layout, e.g. divs not being rendered in the right place in some browsers. For complex
interactions, I'd still prefer Selenium or other "non-optical" tools.
-- Markus (mglaser)
On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 7:30 AM, Markus Glaser <glaser(a)hallowelt.biz> wrote:
Hi,
while I don't like the idea of introducing more and more testing
tools, I can still see an interesting use case here: as of now, we
have no way to test whether a given layout (HTML, JS, CSS) is really
rendered the way we want it to be, since both Selenium and QUnit make
their tests based on DOM, right? Sikuli on the other hand seems to be
based on screenshots and here we could detect broken layout. There is
also some kind of similarity algorithm (which I hope is configurable)
so that one test could be used in different browsers even if the rendering is not
identical to the pixel.
The question is, do we have the need for testing screen layout?
Cheers,
Markus
P.S.: CCing wikitech, since this might be of broader interest.
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Sumana Harihareswara [mailto:sumanah@wikimedia.org]
Gesendet: Dienstag, 30. August 2011 14:02
An: Markus Glaser; Chad Horohoe; Timo Tijhof
Betreff: automated testing with Sikuli?
http://sikuli.org/
Have any of you run across Sikuli before? Just wanted to point it out
to you. It might face the same problems as Selenium, though.
--
Sumana Harihareswara
Volunteer Development Coordinator
Wikimedia Foundation
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