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by RHSeeger
158 days ago
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I worked with someone a little while ago that tended to do this; point out things that weren't really related to the ticket. And I was happy with their work. I think the main thing to remember is that the following are two different things - Understanding what is important to / related to the functionality of a given ticket - Thoroughly testing what is important to / related to the functionality of a given ticket Sure, the first one can waste some time by causing discussion of things that don't matter. But being REALLY good at the second one can mean far less bugs slip through. |
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An under-specified ticket is something thrown over the fence to Dev/QA just like a lazy, bug-ridden feature is thrown over the fence to QA.
This does require everyone to be acting honestly to not have to belabor the obvious stuff for every ticket ('page should load', 'required message should show', etc.). Naturally, what is 'obvious' is also team/product specific.