In short, manual testing is best suited to the following areas/scenarios:
1, Exploratory Testing: This type of testing requires the tester’s knowledge, experience, analytical/logical skills, creativity, and intuition. The test is characterised here by poorly written specification documentation, and/or a short time for execution. We need the human skills to execute the testing process in this scenario.
2, Usability Testing: This is an area in which you need to measure how user-friendly, efficient, or convenient the software or product is for the end users. Here, human observation is the most important factor, so a manual approach is preferable.
3, Ad-hoc Testing: In this scenario, there is no specific approach. It is a totally unplanned method of testing where the understanding and insight of the tester is the only important factor.
Automated testing is the preferred option in the following areas/scenarios:
1, Regression Testing: Here, automated testing is suitable because of frequent code changes and the ability to run the regressions in a timely manner.
2, Load Testing: Automated testing is also the best way to complete the testing efficiently when it comes to load testing. Learn more about load testing with our best practices guide here
3, Repeated Execution: Testing which requires the repeated execution of a task is best automated.
Performance Testing: Similarly, testing which requires the simulation of thousands of concurrent users requires automation.
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It has been ingoing challenge for years that manual testing % should decrease and amount we automate should increase.... What percentage (%) of testing is performed manually still.. Is it really still between 70 - 90% in a typical organisation.
Whats peoples thoughts ? Why is moving to automation so hard ?
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