CoreMedia is the leader in innovative people-centric social software. The company, based in Hamburg, Germany, has successfully positioned itself in the highly-dynamic market for Internet technology. The company is characterized by its innovative and creative culture, and by the focus on collective learning. These values are also to be found in CoreMedia's technology: CoreMedia develops software that enables staff, partners and customers to achieve their goals rapidly, creatively and productively.
Founded in 1996 and headquartered in Hamburg, Germany, CoreMedia has over 150 employees and maintains a global network of implementation partners that includes 500 professional consultants.
ÜOver 200 companies worldwide rely on CoreMedia's content management (CMS) and digital rights management (DRM) solutions, including ARD, Bertelsmann, BenQ, BILD, Continental, DAK, DaimlerChrysler, debitel, Deutsche Telekom, GMX, IKK, NEC, MLP, Motorola, Nokia, O2, Panasonic, Plus, PREMIERE, Quelle, Qualcomm, Samsung, SEAT, Sony Ericsson, T-Mobile, T-Online and Vodafone. CoreMedia is also the basis for online services provided by over 80 public institutions and administrative bodies.
CoreMedia has received many international awards in recent years, praising its innovative culture and software, including the European Business Award, recognition as Best Innovator, and the inclusion in the Deloitte Technology Fast 50 list for fast-growing companies.
Excerpt from a facebook community article from Mark Michaelis, Software Engineer Quality Assurance, CoreMedia AG, Hamburg, Germany:
About the poor GUI Automation Tools: I also think that GUI Test Automation is perhaps one of the most challenging things to do in testing. It takes a long evaluation to get the right automation tool, especially to get one accepted by the whole team.
For Java (Swing Applications) we switched from WinRunner (used for years before) to QF-Test. WinRunner has not been accepted by the team because of its proprietary language TSL. In contrast QF-Test is developed in Java and uses Jython as scripting language. A great start for Java developers. There are many more benefits of QF-Test, but I will only state three of them here:
About the robustness of GUI Test Automation: I think there are two things which need to be done to get the tests as robust as possible. One is already mentioned in the StickyMinds article you quoted: Involve developers. It's for sure needed to add test-hooks into the application. The most simple one is to give GUI elements a unique ID (in Java: using setName()).
The next thing is to have GUI Maps (a term I learned from WinRunner but I also adopted it for QF-Test): Place the rules to identify GUI components in an own database/file. This way you only have to touch this file for slight GUI changes.
But the best thing to do is to create a testing framework. E. g. for every menu action (every in XP sense: every currently used one) I created a library function. Developers just need to call this library function and don't need to care about if there are radio-buttons or a drop-down list behind. If the GUI element changes its type only the framework needs to be adjusted.
Even more complex functions moved into the framework. E. g. for the CMS I created framework functions which automatically create documents (using the GUI). So it's very easy for developers to get some test fixtures to work with.
Finally, back to the code, I added a GUI-Test-Facade to the application. This has two advantages:
Having these three things: GUI Maps, GUI Automation Test Framework, GUI Test Facade I finally got a very robust set of GUI Tests.
AdditionalEvaluation report of CoreMedia
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