adplus-dvertising
frame-decoration

Question

What is the relationship between the All-Edges and All-Nodes adequacy criteria?

a.

All-Edges is weaker than All-Nodes

b.

All-Edges is equal to All-Nodes

c.

All-Edges is stronger than All-Nodes

d.

None of the above

Posted under Software Engineering

Answer: (c).All-Edges is stronger than All-Nodes Explanation:The All-Edges criterion is stronger than (subsumes) the All-Nodes criterion.

Engage with the Community - Add Your Comment

Confused About the Answer? Ask for Details Here.

Know the Explanation? Add it Here.

Q. What is the relationship between the All-Edges and All-Nodes adequacy criteria?

Similar Questions

Discover Related MCQs

Q. Is the All-Uses criterion stronger than the All-Nodes criterion?

Q. Does the subsume relation of the criteria imply better fault-detection ability?

Q. What is the first property of test adequacy criteria according to Weyuker (1988)?

Q. What is the meaning of "Non-exhaustive applicability property"?

Q. What is the meaning of the "Monotonicity property"?

Q. What is the meaning of the "Inadequate empty set property"?

Q. What is the "Antiextensionality property"?

Q. What is the "General multiple change property"?

Q. What is the "Antidecomposition property"?

Q. What is the Anticomposition property?

Q. What is the Renaming property?

Q. What is the Complexity property?

Q. What is the Statement coverage property?

Q. What are the All-Nodes and All-Edges coverage metrics lacking?

Q. What are the three techniques compared in the experiment described by Basili and Selby?

Q. Who participated in the experiment described by Basili and Selby?

Q. What were some of the results of the experiment described by Basili and Selby?

Q. What do the experiments indicate about the best test technique?

Q. What percentage of major errors in the Space Shuttle software were found during early inspections, according to Myers (1988)?

Q. How do inspections compare to other manual techniques in terms of fault detection capabilities?