This is how I work too. I’ve always been a bit embarrassed about it, like I can never get things just right the first time, and have to fiddle with a bunch of stuff until it’s done. This is a good...
This is how I work too. I’ve always been a bit embarrassed about it, like I can never get things just right the first time, and have to fiddle with a bunch of stuff until it’s done. This is a good metaphor though, and it’s totally right. I’ll definitely be keeping this in my back pocket for the next time impostor syndrome strikes.
It sure is, it would be part of exploratory testing to look for easily overlooked things like these. Certainly, when automation can't catch these sort of things. Or more developer focussed, it is...
It’s kind of a QA tactic in a sense
It sure is, it would be part of exploratory testing to look for easily overlooked things like these. Certainly, when automation can't catch these sort of things.
Or more developer focussed, it is why dogfooding by developers, when possible, can have a big impact on your product.
This is how I work too. I’ve always been a bit embarrassed about it, like I can never get things just right the first time, and have to fiddle with a bunch of stuff until it’s done. This is a good metaphor though, and it’s totally right. I’ll definitely be keeping this in my back pocket for the next time impostor syndrome strikes.
Its basically how I program, its a great way to turn bugs into features.
It sure is, it would be part of exploratory testing to look for easily overlooked things like these. Certainly, when automation can't catch these sort of things.
Or more developer focussed, it is why dogfooding by developers, when possible, can have a big impact on your product.