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Testing Solution

Application Testing
Website Testing

Because of its possible instant worldwide audience a Website’s   quality   and

reliability are crucial. The very special nature of the www and Websites pose unique software testing challenges.  

Webmasters, WWW applications developers, and Website quality assurance manages need tools and methods that can match up to the new needs. Mechanized testing via special purpose www testing software offers the potential to meet these challenges.

Websites are something entirely new in the world of software quality! Within minutes of going live, a WWW application can have many thousands more users than a conventional, non-WWW application. The immediacy of the WWW creates an immediate expectation of quality and rapid application delivery, but the technical complexities of a Website and variances in the browser make testing and quality control more difficult, and in some ways, subtler. Automated testing of Websites is both an opportunity and a challenge.

     

The site must be w3c compatible
The website is valid HTML 4.01 as recommended.
This means your website can be accessed by nearly all Internet browser devices, is as compatible with older browsers as well as the latest, and is constructed to the highest industry standard. If your website doesn't validate to this, first, level of compliance, it is not accessible to many people with disabilities, and also not accessible by many Internet browsers.

The website is valid CSS2 as recommended.
This means visitors to your site have complete control over the font family, style, colour and size of font your website uses - very useful for people with visual disabilities, for one, and giving you complete control over the look of your website. CSS enables you to change the look of your website fonts by changing one file, enabling cost effective updating.

The website is rated Bobby AAA as recommended.
Bobby is an online tool which tests a website for obvious barriers to disabled people when accessing your site. To achieve the mark we aim for (Triple AAA), a website must be constructed in such a way that it conforms to Priority 1, 2 and 3 W3C WCAG. Many websites fail even priority 1 compliance, and in doing so, contravene the Disability Discrimination Act (1st October 1999 - section 21).

The website complies (and surpasses) WAI WCAG level AA as recommended.
All UK Government websites must achieve this level of accessibility. This means that a website validates to minimum Priority 2 (Double AA) compliance, This level of compliance means the vast majority of visitors to your website will experience no problems accessing information contained on it, and more importantly, you are building your website to the same standards as the UK Government, which relies heavily (if not totally) on W3C recommendations.

The website makes use of UK government access key standards as recommended.
This means that disabled users have maximum interactivity with a website if, like many people, they only use the keyboard to navigate a website. In some cases some people cannot use the mouse, and so must rely on intuitive keyboard access controls, which circumvent the need for the "point and click" methodology of the mouse.


DEFINING WEBSITE QUALITY & RELIABILITY

A Website is like any piece of software: no single, all-inclusive quality measure applies, and even multiple quality metrics may not apply. Yet, verifying user-critical impressions of "quality" and "reliability" take on new importance.

Dimensions of Quality. There are many dimensions of quality, and each measure will pertain to a particular Website in varying degrees. Here are some of them:

• Time: Websites change often and rapidly? How much has a Websites changed since the last upgrade? How do you highlight the parts that have changed?

• Structural: How well do all of the parts of the Website hold together. Are all links inside and outside the Website working? Do all of the images work? Are there parts of the Website that are not connected?

• Content: Does the content of critical pages match what is supposed to be there? Do key phrases exist continually in highly changeable pages? Do critical pages maintain quality content from version to version? What about dynamically generated HTML pages?

• Accuracy and Consistency: Are today's copies of the pages downloaded the same as yesterdays? Close enough? Is the data presented accurate enough? How do you know?

• Response Time and Latency: Does the Website server respond to a browser request within certain parameters? In an E-commerce context, how is the end-to-end response time after a SUBMIT? Are there parts of a site that are so slow the user declines to continue working on it?

• Performance: Is the Browser-Web-Website-Web-Browser connection quick enough? How does the performance vary by time of day, by load and usage? Is performance adequate for E-commerce applications? Taking 10 minutes to respond to an E-commerce purchase is dearly not acceptable!

Impact of Quality. Quality is in the mind of the user. A poor-quality Website, one with many broken pages and faulty images, with Cgi-Bin error messages, etc. may cost in poor customer relations, lost corporate image, and even in lost revenue. Very complex Websites can sometimes overload the user. The combination of Website complexity and tow quality is potentially lethal to an E-commerce operation. Unhappy users will quickly depart for a different site! And they won't leave with any good impressions.



 
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