In software engineering, an acceptance test is the process of the user testing the system and, based on the results, either granting or refusing acceptance of the software/system being tested. It is often referred to as functional testing, beta testing, QA Testing, application testing, or end user testing. It is also sometimes split into factory acceptance testing and site acceptance testing, the first being run in-house, the second at the customer's site.
2007-02-22 19:49:47
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answer #1
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answered by Paul G 2
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Acceptance Testing comprises a set of tests carried out on anything new to demonstrate that it meets its specification and is fit for purpose. If it fails, you send it back. Everybody does it to some extent
In the case of large organisations and governments buying complex and expensive things, there is likely to be a contractually pre-defined set of tests with pre-agreed pass/fail criteria, and payment only after passing the tests. More than one test might be permitted before the contract is terminated.
2007-02-23 03:55:41
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answer #2
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answered by ROY L 6
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acceptancy testing is set of test or condition that your system must agree with (consider) in order to make it function better. usually the accepting testing will cover all possible solution to errors that occurs in the system. If the system comply with those accetance test, then the system can proceed its process back normally
2007-02-22 19:53:01
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answer #3
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answered by azdersi 1
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