Category: Computer Science


  • A Use Case Diagram is a UML diagram that represents interactions between users and a system. Elaboration: Example: A Login System use case diagram includes User (actor), Login Process, and Authentication System.

  • SRS is a document that defines the functional and non-functional requirements of a software project. Elaboration: Example: An SRS for a hospital management system details appointment scheduling, patient records, and billing.

  • Regression Testing checks if new code changes have broken existing functionalities. Elaboration: Example: Running automated Selenium tests after updating an e-commerce checkout system.

  • Acceptance Testing ensures software meets business requirements and is ready for end-user deployment. Elaboration: Example: A client tests CRM software before rolling it out to sales teams.

  • System Testing evaluates the entire software application as a whole to verify compliance with requirements. Elaboration: Example: Testing a banking application across different operating systems before deployment.

  • Integration Testing verifies that different components/modules of a system work together correctly. Elaboration: Example: Testing API communication between a payment gateway and an e-commerce website.

  • Unit Testing involves testing individual components (functions, modules) of a software application in isolation. Elaboration: Example (Python Unit Test using PyTest): add(a, b): return a + bdef test_add(): assert add(2, 3) == 5

  • Software testing is the process of evaluating software to ensure it functions correctly and meets user requirements. Elaboration: Example: A team uses Selenium automation testing to verify a web applicationโ€™s functionality before launch.

  • DevOps is a software development practice that combines development and IT operations to enable continuous integration and delivery (CI/CD). Elaboration: Example: A cloud-based SaaS company implements DevOps to deploy updates multiple times a day.

  • Kanban is an Agile framework focused on visualizing workflow, limiting work in progress (WIP), and improving efficiency. Elaboration: Example: A technical support team uses Kanban to manage incoming tickets and prioritize tasks.