Actually we shouldn't be disabling the OSK since as Leo and Kevin
noted, that doesn't simulate the real experience on the phone. In fact
I noticed that if you have the text suggestions enabled on the phone,
and then try to create an alarm in the clock app, the alarm label is
almost hidden when the OSK appears which hinders the user experience
and prevents them from being able to tell if the typed out alarm name
is correct or not! Obviously this is not tested by AP and hence the
tests would just pass fine. But I only noticed while doing a manual
alarm test on my phone.
So yeah, if possible we should simulate pressing the OSK keys while
running AP tests on the phone.
nik90
On Mon 10 Mar 2014 15:52:50 CET, Nicholas Skaggs wrote:
On Fri, Mar 7, 2014 at 12:44 PM, Leo Arias <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
One important thing to notice, that I mentioned to Kevin and some
other people, but I'm not sure if everybody knows.
Currently, on the devices we are not using the OSK to test the
apps. We are simulating keystroke events so things get written to
the text fields without simulated fingers being involved. That is
wrong, of course.
We have a bug for the affected core apps tests here:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu-clock-app/+bug/1268640
In some cases the OSK was disabled due to it overlaying screen
elements. Just something to note when attempting to correct.
Nicholas
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