6 Integrations with Testinium

View a list of Testinium integrations and software that integrates with Testinium below. Compare the best Testinium integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with Testinium. Here are the current Testinium integrations in 2024:

  • 1
    Google Chrome
    Connect to the world on the browser built by Google. Google builds powerful tools that help you connect, play, work and get things done. And all of it works on Chrome. With Google apps like Gmail, Google Pay, and Google Assistant, Chrome can help you stay productive and get more out of your browser.
  • 2
    Mozilla Firefox
    Firefox is a browser created by Mozilla, a product designed to protect your privacy.
  • 3
    Selenium

    Selenium

    Software Freedom Conservancy

    Selenium automates browsers. That's it! What you do with that power is entirely up to you. Primarily it is for automating web applications for testing purposes, but is certainly not limited to just that. Boring web-based administration tasks can (and should) also be automated as well. If you want to create robust, browser-based regression automation suites and tests, scale and distribute scripts across many environments, then you want to use Selenium WebDriver, a collection of language specific bindings to drive a browser - the way it is meant to be driven. If you want to create quick bug reproduction scripts, create scripts to aid in automation-aided exploratory testing, then you want to use Selenium IDE; a Chrome and Firefox add-on that will do simple record-and-playback of interactions with the browser. If you want to scale by distributing and running tests on several machines and manage multiple environments from a central point.
  • 4
    Gauge

    Gauge

    ThoughtWorks

    Gauge is a free and open source framework for writing and running acceptance tests. Gauge tests are in Markdown which makes writing and maintaining tests easier. Reuse specifications and robust refactoring to reduce duplication. Less code and readable specifications means less time spent on maintaining the test suite. Gauge works with multiple languages, CI/CD tools and automation drivers. You don't have to learn a new language or tool to get your test automation tool to work for you. Gauge has a robust plugin architecture and plugin ecosystem. You can easily extend Gauge to add support for IDEs, drivers, datasources, text execution events or your favorite programming language. Don’t waste time going through stacktraces. Gauge takes a screenshot on a test failure allowing you to get a visible picture of what went wrong. Reports are available across multiple formats (XML, JSON, HTML).
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    Cucumber

    Cucumber

    SmartBear

    Validate executable specifications against your code on any modern development stack. With over 40 million downloads, Cucumber Open is the world’s #1 automation tool for Behavior-Driven Development. Cucumber Open isn't just open source, it's an open platform that plays well with the tools you already use and love. Works with Java, JavaScript, Ruby, .NET and many other platforms. Store plain text specifications alongside your code in your own source control system. Describe how the system should behave in a way that everybody can understand. Automate with Selenium, API calls or direct function calls in the same process. Generate reports in HTML, JSON and other formats, or build your own reports. Integrate with CucumberStudio, JIRA or build your own plugins. Bridge the gap between business and development using BDD. Decrease rework with test automation. Get real-time insights with living documentation. Seamless integration with Git.
  • 6
    Appium

    Appium

    The JS Foundation

    Appium is an open source test automation framework for use with native, hybrid and mobile web apps. It drives iOS, Android, and Windows apps using the WebDriver protocol. Appium is built on the idea that testing native apps shouldn't require including an SDK or recompiling your app. And that you should be able to use your preferred test practices, frameworks, and tools. Appium is an open source project and has made design and tool decisions to encourage a vibrant contributing community. Appium aims to automate any mobile app from any language and any test framework, with full access to back-end APIs and DBs from test code. Write tests with your favorite dev tools using all the above programming languages, and probably more (with the Selenium WebDriver API and language-specific client libraries).
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