@article{Quesada-López_Hernandez-Agüero_Jenkins_2019, title={Characterization of software testing practices: A replicated survey in Costa Rica}, volume={7}, url={https://sol.sbc.org.br/journals/index.php/jserd/article/view/472}, DOI={10.5753/jserd.2019.472}, abstractNote={<p>Software testing is an essential activity in software development projects for delivering high quality products. In a previous study, we reported the results of a survey of software engineering practices in the Costa Rican industry. To make a more in depth analysis of the specific software testing practices among practitioners, we replicated a previous survey conducted in South America. Our objective was to characterize the state of the practice based on practitioners use and perceived importance of those practices. This survey evaluated 42 testing practices grouped in three categories: processes, activities and tools. A total of 92 practitioners responded to the survey. The participants indicated that: (1) tasks for recording of the results of tests, documentation of test procedures and cases, and re-execution of tests when the software is modified are useful and important for software testing practitioners. (2) Acceptance and system testing are the two most useful and important testing types. (3) Tools for recording defects and the effort to fix them (bug tracking) and the availability of a test database for reuse are useful and important. Regarding use and implementation of practices, the participants stated that (4) Planning and designing of software testing before coding and evaluating the quality of test artifacts are not a regular practice. (5) There is a lack of measurement of defect density and test coverage in the industry; and (6) tools for automatic generation of test cases and for estimating testing effort are rarely used. This study gave us a first glance at the state of the practice in software testing in a thriving and very dynamic industry that currently employs most of our computer science professionals. The benefits are twofold: for academia, it provides us with a road map to revise our academic offer, and for practitioners it provides them with a first set of data to benchmark their practices.</p>}, journal={Journal of Software Engineering Research and Development}, author={Quesada-López, Christian and Hernandez-Agüero, Erika and Jenkins, Marcelo}, year={2019}, month={Dec.}, pages={6:1 – 6:20} }