Because we are! The Test Studio Mobile team will be in San Francisco next week for Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference. We'd love to meet you and discuss any questions, comments, and concerns you have about our software. Even if you're curious about a different Telerik product, we'll do our best to help you. Here are a few examples of what we can do for you: A quick product demonstration Answer how-to questions Share roadmap details Discuss your ideas for new features Work through a technical issue Contact me (@rinaldi_anthony) or Robert Shoemate (@Shoerob) on Twitter to ...
Greetings, fellow testers. Last week we talked about Data Driven Tests and how they can speed through dozens or hundreds of variations quickly for you. In the example I used a simple sample application, just a web page with a form. Often we need to log in and/or perform some setup steps before the actual "meat" of the test, or have some cleanup tasks after we're done — we certainly wouldn't want to do that for every iteration. That would be silly and time-wasting. Let's look at a better way. Here's our simple test, modified to use a login screen. ...
INotifyPropertyChanged and INotifyPropertyChanging interface implementations for all persistent properties will be only one click away with Q2 2013 of OpenAccess ORM!
It's a tough decision to know when it is best to use a reporting solution or when it's better to use a control suite. In part 1 of the series, we go over some of the high-level criteria that can help you along in your decision then dive into a control suite sample using live data and the RadChartView control for WinForms.
Do you want to stay up to date with the RadHtmlChart? Then, you can take advantage of the new SeriesItems Collection which was introduced in Q2 2013 Beta as a replacement for the obsolete Items property. You no longer have to worry about which are the necessary properties you need to set for your chart - the new series item types will show you the right choices. Follow this blog post to find out how!
This is Part 4 of a four part series where we explore some of the tools available to detect and manage online/offline connectivity in web/mobile applications. In Part 1 we looked at the available APIs for detecting connectivity state (and the woes associated with them). In Part 2 we wrote a hand-rolled abstraction to manage using these APIs together and began to see elements of a state machine emerge from the chaos. In Part 3 we explored how we can keep our FSMs from violating SRP, and set the stage for using multiple FSMs together to model more complex application behavior. In this final part of the series, we look at setting up hierarchical FSMs to manage more complex behavior.
What's new in Fiddler 2.4.4.5 / 4.4.4.5? Tons! Read on to learn about performance improvements, new UI features, WebSockets, scripting, and FiddlerCore.