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PeopleCert CSTE Exam - Topic 1 Question 10 Discussion

Actual exam question for PeopleCert's CSTE exam
Question #: 10
Topic #: 1
[All CSTE Questions]

Many types of errors can be identified and fixed far more economically by design and code inspections than by testing

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Suggested Answer: A

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Donette
4 months ago
Surprised to hear that! Testing seems so thorough.
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Rex
4 months ago
Inspections are cheaper, no doubt about it.
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Mayra
4 months ago
Really? I thought testing was more effective.
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Heike
4 months ago
I've heard that too, makes sense.
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Reynalda
4 months ago
Totally agree, inspections catch issues early!
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Stefania
5 months ago
I recall reading that many errors are indeed cheaper to fix during inspections, so I would probably go with true on this one.
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Felicitas
5 months ago
I’m a bit confused. I know inspections help, but can they really fix all errors before testing? I might need to think this through more.
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Werner
5 months ago
I feel like we discussed a similar question in class about the cost-effectiveness of inspections versus testing. I might lean towards true.
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Paris
5 months ago
I think I remember that inspections can catch issues early, but I'm not entirely sure if they're always more economical than testing.
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Rima
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused by this question. The options don't seem to directly match the question about the primary use case of data collection tasks. I'll have to think this through and try to eliminate the options that don't seem relevant.
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Howard
5 months ago
I've got a strategy for this. I'll break it down into smaller steps - first determine the total available bandwidth, then use the policy weights to calculate the share for each queue. That should lead me to the PIR and CIR for queue 3.
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Chantell
5 months ago
Okay, let me think this through step-by-step. We have 2 customer types, 2 account types, and 2 countries. That's 6 variables total. Using a 2-wise orthogonal array, the minimum number of test cases would be 4. I'm confident that's the right answer.
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Margret
5 months ago
I recall something about IPsec VPNs being used, but that seems more related to security than bandwidth.
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