Jay Harris's blog on .net development, automation, and improving quality through code. RSS 2.0
# Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Scott Hanselman is my new hero. He is filling the hole—the one thing preventing Watir from becoming real competitor in the automated functional test market: script recording. Watch out Mercury; by creating WatirMaker, Scott is opening the flood gates, and Watir is going to come pouring through.

This changes everything.

I started out my career as a developer, but as I noted in an earlier blog, I get much more enjoyment from breaking things than I do building things, so I jumped ship. With my development experience I can delve in to making some rather wicked scripts for QTP, LoadRunner, and lately, Watir. However, my testers don’t share my skill set. My biggest hurdle in ousting QTP and making Watir our standard is the lack of recording; I can not expect every tester to start coding away in Ruby. It should come as no surprise that when I opened Scott’s blog this morning, I was so excited that I nearly wet myself.

It is a work in progress, but soon Scott hopes to have a fully functional recording tool for Watir. With WatirMaker, my testers can hit a button and start clicking away in IE; the tool will happily watch like a little kid on the sidelines, learning every move. My testers can all adopt Watir with open arms, and we can wave goodbye to that Mercury maintenance contract.

The only thing left to say is: “Scott…thanks!”

Wednesday, July 27, 2005 12:55:50 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [0] -
Programming | Testing | Tools | Watir
Navigation
Twitter : Do you follow me?
View Jason Harris's profile on LinkedIn
Upcoming Conferences
Join me at CodeStock
devLink : I'll be there, how about you?
About the author/Disclaimer

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

© Copyright 2008
Jason Harris
Sign In
Statistics
Total Posts: 70
This Year: 9
This Month: 1
This Week: 1
Comments: 1
All Content © 2008, Jason Harris
DasBlog theme 'Business' created by Christoph De Baene (delarou)
Technorati Profile