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  References and Citations
Added by Tin Steeler, last edited by Tin Steeler on Nov 07, 2006
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Automate acceptance tests with Selenium Christian Hellsten (IBM), 20 Dec 2005

Acceptance, or functional, testing is designed to put manual tasks through their paces, but testing these tasks by hand can be time consuming and prone to human error. In this article, the author shows architects, developers, and testers how to use the Selenium testing tools to automate acceptance tests; automating the tests saves times and helps eliminate tester mistakes. You also are provided with an example of how to apply Selenium in a real-world project using Ruby on Rails and Ajax.

Talking Selenium with Luke Closs
QA Podcast, 2 Nov 2005

I don't know why anybody didn't think of this before. The QA developer that I talked to said 'Wow, this is so good. I've spent so many hours doing regression testing of our Web managers.'

Web app testing with Python part 2: Selenium and Twisted Grig Gheorghiu, 03 Mar 2005

I've been experimenting with Selenium for the past few days and I'm very impressed (a reaction which seems to be common to everybody who witnessed the tool in action.) ... Overall, I think Selenium is an amazing acceptance test tool for Web applications and I hope it will be adopted on a wide scale. My post focused on the stand-alone Twisted-based server, since it offers a feature not available in other Selenium implementations, namely the ability to test Web sites without instrumenting them on the server side.

Browser-Based Testing Survey (sub req'd) Danny Faught, 31 Dec 2004

Uses a FIT-like table interface and an object-based language reminiscent of Worksoft Certify and the latest release of Mercury QuickTest Pro, though it's not a complete keyword-driven framework. Requires extra work to avoid cross-site scripting security protections.

Initial Impressions Antony Marcano, 20 Nov 2004

Considering the simplicity of it, it is almost surprising that no one has thought of doing this previously. The framework is simple and the code is neat and very maintainable. Sometimes it takes a work of genius to find the uncomplicated solution to a potentially complicated problem.

Geeknight Selenium Scot McPhee, 22 Nov 2004

What's cool about it is that it understands the dreaded Javascript. It actually drives your local browser via a very clever set of Javascript functions.... It's pretty raw at the moment, only young, but I think in a short while it will show some definite promise.

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