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On-hand Testing

"On-hand testing" refers to the process of testing software while it is being developed. This type of testing is performed during the development phase, before the software is released to production, and is often done by developers or by a dedicated testing team.

The goal of on-hand testing is to identify and resolve any issues with the software as early as possible in the development process. This helps reduce the cost and effort required to fix the issues later on and helps ensure the quality of the final product.

On-hand testing can involve various types of testing, such as unit testing, integration testing, functional testing, and performance testing. These tests are performed on individual components or on the software as a whole and help validate that the software is working as intended.

In order to achieve a sound ecosystem or environment of testing one needs to have a proper management tool for logging tasks, and assignments and a clean system of workflow management. This entire structure is defined for a project early on, but luckily they aren't much different from one another and require frameworks and tools which are unique as far as User Interface and User Experience are concerned but quite similar in their core concept of them. We will explore more in the next session