Hacks.Mozilla.Org: A web testing deep dive: The MDN web testing report |
For the last couple of years, we’ve run the MDN Web Developer Needs Assessment (DNA) Report, which aims to highlight the key issues faced by developers building web sites and applications. This has proved to be an invaluable source of data for browser vendors and other organizations to prioritize improvements to the web platform. This year we did a deep dive into web testing, and we are delighted to be able to announce the publication of this follow-on work, available at our insights.developer.mozilla.org site along with our other Web DNA publications.
In the Web DNA studies for 2019 and 2020, developers ranked the need “Having to support specific browsers, (e.g., IE11)” as the most frustrating aspect of web development, among 28 needs. The 2nd and 3rd rankings were also related to browser compatibility:
In 2020, we released our browser compatibility research results — a deeper dive into identifying specific issues around browser compatibility and pinpointing what can be done to mitigate these issues.
This year we decided to follow up with another deep dive focused on the 4th most frustrating aspect of developing for the web, “Testing across browsers.” It follows on nicely from the previous deep dive, and also concerns much-sought-after information.
You can download this report directly — see the Web Testing Report (PDF, 0.6MB).
Based on the 2019 ranking of “testing across browsers”, we introduced a new question to the DNA survey in 2020: “What are the biggest pain points for you when it comes to web testing?” We wanted to understand more about this need and what some of the underlying issues are.
Respondents could choose one or more of the following answers:
7.5% of respondents (out of 6,645) said they don’t have pain points with web testing. For those who did, the biggest pain point is the time spent on manual testing.
To better understand the nuances behind these results, we ran a qualitative study on web testing. The study consisted of twenty one-hour interviews with web developers who took the 2020 DNA survey and agreed to participate in follow-up research.
The results will help browser vendors understand whether to accelerate work on WebDriver Bidirectional Protocol (BiDi) or if the unmet needs lie elsewhere. Our analysis on WebDriver BiDi is based on the assumption that the feature gap between single-browser test tooling and cross-browser test tooling is a source of pain. Future research on the struggles developers have will be able to focus the priorities and technical design of that specification to address the pain points.
The post A web testing deep dive: The MDN web testing report appeared first on Mozilla Hacks - the Web developer blog.
https://hacks.mozilla.org/2021/04/a-web-testing-deep-dive-the-mdn-web-testing-report/
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