Salut Petr :) Petr Dudacek wrote:
Salut Sophie,
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This is very clear, thank you :) I was surprised that I can't edit scenarios, but now I understand it is taken from categories.
This is strange. With your roles, you should be able to edit existing & create new scenarios... If you go to Test Scenario Maintenance from the main menu and then choose one of the scenarios, at the top of the page you should see the form for editing the scenario (text fields for Name, Sequence, Comment and Test Case IDs and buttons Update, Reset, Delete, Cancel). Below this form, there is the list of test cases that are contained in the scenario.
It's ok, I see all of this,
If this is not your case, it might be useful if you post a screenshot somewhere or send it directly to me, so that we could solve this problem.
No, no problems, I'm able to see Content and Test Case IDs, and I'm able to add new test scenarios
One question, on the Test Assigment Maintenance page, we will now have (for example for me) sgauti(scenario) P1 --> P1 is the priority I imagine, but how is it set and by whom ?
This is also one of the features in the new TCM. Each test case can have a priority set from 1 (highest) to 5 (lowest) to specify how important the test case is (the default value is 1). The scenarios can be composed of test cases with different priorities. When you make an assignment, you assign a scenario to a person and you also need to specify a priority - this is what you see in "sgauti(scenario) P1". P1 here says that for this assignment, you will see only test cases with priority 1. If you set P3 instead of P1, you will see P1, P2 and P3 test cases. So if you want the tester to see all test cases from the scenario, you need to set P5 in the assignment.
Ok, thanks, it's clear
However, we don't need to worry about this feature at the moment, because all test cases have P1 (as a result of the migration from the old TCM), which means that the tester will always see all test cases in the scenario, regardless the priority that you set with the assignment. On the other hand, if we extend the number of test cases in the future, it might be useful to set different priorities to the test cases to allow more flexibility for the assignments...
Yes, I understand
Does this answer your question?
Yes, I think I'm ready for the new TCM use now :) Thanks for your work Kind regards Sophie --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
