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(it's each application which must have a menu icon, not necessarily each menu entry) |
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|description=This test case tests whether the menu layout in a standard Fedora installation meets basic standards of navigability and polish. | |description=This test case tests whether the menu layout in a standard Fedora installation meets basic standards of navigability and polish. |
Revision as of 20:57, 23 January 2011
Description
This test case tests whether the menu layout in a standard Fedora installation meets basic standards of navigability and polish.
How to test
- Perform a standard installation of the Fedora version (or pre-release) you wish to test, from the DVD image
- Examine each menu entry in each level of the default system menu layout, and ensure each application has an icon, at a resolution high enough not to appear pixelated, and consistent in appearance with other icons
- Check there is no Other menu at the top level of the system menu layout
- Check for cases where applications appear twice in the system menu layout
- Launch each application that appears in the system menu layout in turn, and try some very basic usage of it (such as opening a file appropriate to the application, or performing a basic operation). Also check for a Help menu with a working About entry
Expected Results
- Each entry on the default system menu layout should have an appropriate icon
- No Other menu should be present at the top level of the system menu layout
- Applications should not unintentionally appear in the system menu layout twice. Some appear twice intentionally, so check all cases with the desktop team before filing bugs
- Each application in the default system menu layout should launch without crashing and withstand basic usage. Bugs should be filed in any case where this does not happen