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Channel: How should I approach bugs that I know will never be solved? - Software Quality Assurance & Testing Stack Exchange
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Answer by Claudio Delzanno for How should I approach bugs that I know will...

Another problem with deciding which bugs to report or not is that there is a risk that you stop reporting bugs that should have been reported and corrected. In my experience you should report ALL bugs...

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Answer by L123 for How should I approach bugs that I know will never be solved?

One of the most important tester's tasks is to find bugs, track them clearly in order to allow developers to reproduce them and set the right priority and severity. I fully understand you concern when...

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Answer by sameer joshi for How should I approach bugs that I know will never...

bug may be major or minor need to be fixed ASAP because as a black box testers we don't know the code structure and objects used in it so severity of that bug might be high or low , fixing those minor...

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Answer by Michael Durrant for How should I approach bugs that I know will...

Yes, it is common for some bugs to never be fixed because it's always considered to be more worthwhile for the business to either fix different ones, perform tasks or (most commonly) implement new...

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Answer by Alex J for How should I approach bugs that I know will never be...

Based on your example "fluff" bug, which is not really that fluffy: keep logging small bugs, and do more to convince your team to fix them. The book Lessons Learned in Software Testing addresses this...

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How should I approach bugs that I know will never be solved?

Occasionally I'll find a bug that is so minor, so miniscule, so unimportant that I know it will get buried under all the high priority bugs. The bugs I find in the application are things like "The Tab...

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