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Semester; #06

Section; SE(6A, B)
Course; Software Quality Engineering

Course ID; SEN#407


Assignment#01

Q1: What is the difference between quality assurance and quality engineering?

Quality assurance (QA)
Making test plans, preparing sprints and releases, and taking part in ceremonies as the testing
expert.
Backlog management involves developing and shaping tales by locating edge cases and missing
Acceptance Criteria.
delivering functional tests after a narrative has been developed and discussing the testing status
during daily stand-ups.
Working closely with developers during the retest and issue-finding phases, testing both
functionality and behaviour, consistently tracking down defects, and continuously documenting
bugs.
identifying UX, performance, security, and regression test cases for the application, as well as test
cases for mobile devices and those linked to browsers.
Working with the client team, creating test procedures for acceptance testing, coordinating and
assessing issues discovered during testing, and categorising them as bugs or improvements
establishing habitats manually.

QUALITY ENGINEERING (QE)

Identify the test cases that are executed repeatedly.


Identify the tests that involve multiple browsers, devices, and different versions of
operating systems.
Identify end-to-end test cases.
Automate the identified test cases with the help of the automation testing
frameworks/tools.
Address most of the challenges of manual testing.
Automate the tests to be executed in the continuous integration (CI) process when builds
are deployed in various environments.
Identify bugs because of automation test failures and re-run tests after resolution of
failures.

Q2: Why is quantification of quality goals important?

Quality goals important

We can give precise and granular ways to track progress toward goals by quantifying our aims. This
makes it simple to compare performance throughout the course of the goal period and identify areas for
improvement.

Massive-scale research, planning, managing, and decision-making are made easier by quantification,
which also aids in making sense of and analyzing large datasets. Some academics contend that every
facet of social life can—and even ought to—be quantified considering these benefits.

Q3: What can you do if certain quality goals are hard to quantify? Can you give some
concrete examples of such situations and practical suggestions?

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