Write browser-agnostic tests in plain English. Run them on 3000+ real browsers and devices. Automate cross-browser testing with a low-code platform that works out of the box.
Write scripts in plain English or record and generate them. Testsigma abstracts driver-based browser differences so you don’t have to.
Learn moreMake test maintenance obsolete. Testsigma AI updates UI elements and identifies regression-affected tests while you’re away.
Learn moreParallelize your tests across 3000+ real browsers and devices on a high-availability cloud.
Learn moreSee how your application works, end to end, for users who switch between desktop and mobile devices.
See how it works.Enable visual testing for entire tests, or for steps that you need to test for visual regressions.
Run web app tests in debug mode to pause execution at failure and debug errors in real-time.
Replace multiple tools in your test stack with an integrated low-code platform.
Requirement management
Test management
Versioning
User and role management
Scheduled test runs
Local testing
Parallel testing
Cross browser and device testing
Interactive debugging
Browser-console debugging logs
Screenshots and videos
Text logs
AI Suggestion Engine
Productivity trends
Visual testing
Centralized agent control
Trigger cross-browser compatibility tests at predetermined checkpoints in your delivery pipeline. Integrate with bug reporting tools to automatically populate tickets with browser, OS and device metadata.
Technically, no. Cross-browser testing is a subset of compatibility testing. Cross-browser testing ensures that a website or web app will provide the same user experience across browsers. Compatibility testing is not limited to web apps and is done to ensure that your software can run on different hardware and operating systems. However, modern web app performance can also be affected by device hardware, which is why today, cross-browser testing is used interchangeably with compatibility testing.
Web app performance can be drastically altered by different browser families, their versions, and even the underlying operating systems. To provide the same rich user experience across devices and browsers, it is necessary to test web apps for cross-browser compatibility.