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  2. Squish (Froglogic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squish_(Froglogic)

    Squish is a commercial cross-platform GUI and regression testing tool that can test applications based on a variety of graphical user interface (GUI) technologies (see list below). It is developed and maintained by Froglogic. [1] [2]

  3. Hit-testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hit-testing

    In computer graphics programming, hit-testing (hit detection, picking, or pick correlation [1]) is the process of determining whether a user-controlled cursor (such as a mouse cursor or touch-point on a touch-screen interface) intersects a given graphical object (such as a shape, line, or curve) drawn on the screen.

  4. Graphical user interface testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_user_interface...

    A system to do this testing for the X window system, but extensible to any windowing system is described in. [7] The X Window system provides functionality (via XServer and the editors' protocol) to dynamically send GUI input to and get GUI output from the program without directly using the GUI. For example, one can call XSendEvent() to ...

  5. Comparison of GUI testing tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_GUI_testing...

    Linux Desktop Testing Project: Linux (With Windows and OSX ports) GUI applications with accessibility APIs (Collaborative project) GNU LGPL: Yes: 3.5.0 [7] Oracle Application Testing Suite: Windows: Web, Oracle Technology Products: Oracle: Proprietary: Yes: 12.5 [8] [9] Active QF-Test: Windows, Linux, macOS X, Web (cross-browser)

  6. Polling (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polling_(computer_science)

    A poll message is a control-acknowledgment message.. In a multidrop line arrangement (a central computer and different terminals in which the terminals share a single communication line to and from the computer), the system uses a master/slave polling arrangement whereby the central computer sends message (called polling message) to a specific terminal on the outgoing line.

  7. Mouse tracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_tracking

    Mouse tracking (also known as cursor tracking) is the use of software to collect users' mouse cursor positions on the computer. [1] This goal is to automatically gather richer information about what people are doing, typically to improve the design of an interface. Often this is done on the Web and can supplement eye tracking in some situations.

  8. curses (programming library) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curses_(programming_library)

    Curses is designed to facilitate GUI-like functionality on a text-only device, such as a PC running in console mode, a hardware ANSI terminal, a Telnet or SSH client, or similar. Curses-based software is software whose user interface is implemented through the curses library, or a compatible library (such as ncurses ).

  9. Event loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_loop

    The GLib event loop was originally created for use in GTK but is now used in non-GUI applications as well, such as D-Bus. The resource polled is the collection of file descriptors the application is interested in; the polling block will be interrupted if a signal arrives or a timeout expires (e.g. if the application has specified a timeout or ...