Works on: Windows 10 | Windows 8.1 | Windows 8 | Windows 7 | Windows XP | Windows 2000 | Windows 2003 | Windows 2008 | Windows Vista | Windows 2012 SHA1 Hash: 03c9edfe174bfb926161d6d4540de3059b16db44 Size: 2.6 MB File Format: msi
Rating: 2.347826086
out of 5
based on 23 user ratings
Publisher Website: External Link Downloads: 847 License: Demo / Trial Version
WiseTester is a demo software by Trixoft and works on Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows 2003, Windows 2008, Windows Vista, Windows 2012.
You can download WiseTester which is 2.6 MB in size and belongs to the software category Programming. WiseTester was released on 2010-11-15 and last updated on our database on 2017-04-22 and is currently at version 1.
Thank you for downloading from SoftPaz! Your download should start any moment now. It would be great if you could rate and share:
Rate this software:
Share in your network:
WiseTester Description
WiseTester is a development tool for .NET developers using unit tests in order to test their code. When a certain unit test fails, either on the developers machine or on the build server, WiseTester can find the code changes which caused the unit test to fail, saving you the time of debugging the code in order to find the problem.
WiseTester integrates into the Visual Studio, collecting information regarding the changes you make during your development session so that when you finish developing something, the test analysis can point the exact code changes which caused a certain unit test failure.
Using WiseTester you can gain the following benefits: Reduce development time and increase productivity by letting the developers concentrate on real tasks instead of chasing unit test failures and debug unit tests which used to work. Overcome unit test failures even if they occurred due to code changes committed by other team members. Easily overcome failures in unit tests that cover source code which you inherited from other developers (legacy code). Easily overcome failures in heavy unit tests which are being executed in a low frequency (once in a week/month). Encourage developers to write more unit tests.