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-Bilal-
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Gefrustreerd ben ik.
-- dit bericht is voor het laatst aangepast op zondag 19 april 2015 door -Bilal- -- |
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Stylzz
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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean commodo ligula eget dolor. Aenean massa. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Donec quam felis, ultricies nec, pellentesque eu, pretium quis, sem. Nulla consequat massa quis enim. Donec pede justo, fringilla vel, aliquet nec, vulputate eget, arcu. In enim justo, rhoncus ut, imperdiet a, venenatis vitae, justo. Nullam dictum felis eu pede mollis pretium. Integer tincidunt. Cras dapibus. Vivamus elementum semper nisi. Aenean vulputate eleifend tellus. Aenean leo ligula, porttitor eu, consequat vitae, eleifend ac, enim. Aliquam lorem ante, dapibus in, viverra quis, feugiat a, tellus. Phasellus viverra nulla ut metus varius laoreet. Quisque rutrum. Aenean imperdiet. Etiam ultricies nisi vel augue. Curabitur ullamcorper ultricies nisi. Nam eget dui.
Etiam rhoncus. Maecenas tempus, tellus eget condimentum rhoncus, sem quam semper libero, sit amet adipiscing sem neque sed ipsum. Nam quam nunc, blandit vel, luctus pulvinar, hendrerit id, lorem. Maecenas nec odio et ante tincidunt tempus. Donec vitae sapien ut libero venenatis faucibus. Nullam quis ante. Etiam sit amet orci eget eros faucibus tincidunt. Duis leo. Sed fringilla mauris sit amet nibh. Donec sodales sagittis magna. Sed consequat, leo eget bibendum sodales, augue velit cursus nunc, quis gravida magna mi a libero. Fusce vulputate eleifend sapien. Vestibulum purus quam, scelerisque ut, mollis sed, nonummy id, metus. Nullam accumsan lorem in dui. Cras ultricies mi eu turpis hendrerit fringilla. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; In ac dui quis mi consectetuer lacinia.
Nam pretium turpis et arcu. Duis arcu tortor, suscipit eget, imperdiet nec, imperdiet iaculis, ipsum. Sed aliquam ultrices mauris. Integer ante arcu, accumsan a, consectetuer eget, posuere ut, mauris. Praesent adipiscing. Phasellus ullamcorper ipsum rutrum nunc. Nunc nonummy metus. Vestibulum volutpat pretium libero. Cras id dui. Aenean ut eros et nisl sagittis vestibulum. Nullam nulla eros, ultricies sit amet, nonummy id, imperdiet feugiat, pede. Sed lectus. Donec mollis hendrerit risus. Phasellus nec sem in justo pellentesque facilisis. Etiam imperdiet imperdiet orci. Nunc nec neque. Phasellus leo dolor, tempus non, auctor et, hendrerit quis, nisi.
Curabitur ligula sapien, tincidunt non, euismod vitae, posuere imperdiet, leo. Maecenas malesuada. Praesent congue erat at massa. Sed cursus turpis vitae tortor. Donec posuere vulputate arcu. Phasellus accumsan cursus velit. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Sed aliquam, nisi quis porttitor congue, elit erat euismod orci, ac placerat dolor lectus quis orci. Phasellus consectetuer vestibulum elit. Aenean tellus metus, bibendum sed, posuere ac, mattis non, nunc. Vestibulum fringilla pede sit amet augue. In turpis. Pellentesque posuere. Praesent turpis.
Aenean posuere, tortor sed cursus feugiat, nunc augue blandit nunc, eu sollicitudin urna dolor sagittis lacus. Donec elit libero, sodales nec, volutpat a, suscipit non, turpis. Nullam sagittis. Suspendisse pulvinar, augue ac venenatis condimentum, sem libero volutpat nibh, nec pellentesque velit pede quis nunc. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Fusce id purus. Ut varius tincidunt libero. Phasellus dolor. Maecenas vestibulum mollis diam. Pellentesque ut neque. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas.
In dui magna, posuere eget, vestibulum et, tempor auctor, justo. In ac felis quis tortor malesuada pretium. Pellentesque auctor neque nec urna. Proin sapien ipsum, porta a, auctor quis, euismod ut, mi. Aenean viverra rhoncus pede. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Ut non enim eleifend felis pretium feugiat. Vivamus quis mi. Phasellus a est. Phasellus magna.
In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Curabitur at lacus ac velit ornare lobortis. Curabitur a felis in nunc fringilla tristique. Morbi mattis ullamcorper velit. Phasellus gravida semper nisi. Nullam vel sem. Pellentesque libero tortor, tincidunt et, tincidunt eget, semper nec, quam. Sed hendrerit. Morbi ac felis. Nunc egestas, augue at pellentesque laoreet, felis eros vehicula leo, at malesuada velit leo quis pede. Donec interdum, metus et hendrerit aliquet, dolor diam sagittis ligula, eget egestas libero turpis vel mi. Nunc nulla. Fusce risus nisl, viverra et, tempor et, pretium in, sapien. Donec venenatis vulputate lorem.
Morbi nec metus. Phasellus blandit leo ut odio. Maecenas ullamcorper, dui et placerat feugiat, eros pede varius nisi, condimentum viverra felis nunc et lorem. Sed magna purus, fermentum eu, tincidunt eu, varius ut, felis. In auctor lobortis lacus. Quisque libero metus, condimentum nec, tempor a, commodo mollis, magna. Vestibulum ullamcorper mauris at ligula. Fusce fermentum. Nullam cursus lacinia erat. Praesent blandit laoreet nibh.
Fusce convallis metus id felis luctus adipiscing. Pellentesque egestas, neque sit amet convallis pulvinar, justo nulla eleifend augue, ac auctor orci leo non est. Quisque id mi. Ut tincidunt tincidunt erat. Etiam feugiat lorem non metus. Vestibulum dapibus nunc ac augue. Curabitur vestibulum aliquam leo. Praesent egestas neque eu enim. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Fusce a quam. Etiam ut purus mattis mauris sodales aliquam. Curabitur nisi. Quisque malesuada placerat nisl. Nam ipsum risus, rutrum vitae, vestibulum eu, molestie vel, lacus.
Sed augue ipsum, egestas nec, vestibulum et, malesuada adipiscing, dui. Vestibulum facilisis, purus nec pulvinar iaculis, ligula mi congue nunc, vitae euismod ligula urna in dolor. Mauris sollicitudin fermentum libero. Praesent nonummy mi in odio. Nunc interdum lacus sit amet orci. Vestibulum rutrum, mi nec elementum vehicula, eros quam gravida nisl, id fringilla neque ante vel mi. Morbi mollis tellus ac sapien. Phasellus volutpat, metus eget egestas mollis, lacus lacus blandit dui, id egestas quam mauris ut lacus. Fusce vel dui. Sed in libero ut nibh placerat accumsan. Proin faucibus arcu quis ante. In consectetuer turpis ut velit. Nulla sit amet est. Praesent metus tellus, elementum eu, semper a, adipiscing nec, purus. Cras risus ipsum, faucibus ut, ullamcorper id, varius ac, leo. Suspendisse feugiat. Suspendisse enim turpis, dictum sed, iaculis a, condimentum nec, nisi. Praesent nec nisl a purus blandit viverra. Praesent ac massa at ligula laoreet iaculis. Nulla neque dolor, sagittis eget, iaculis quis, molestie non, velit.
Mauris turpis nunc, blandit et, volutpat molestie, porta ut, ligula. Fusce pharetra convallis urna. Quisque ut nisi. Donec mi odio, faucibus at, scelerisque quis, convallis in, nisi. Suspendisse non nisl sit amet velit hendrerit rutrum. Ut leo. Ut a nisl id ante tempus hendrerit. Proin pretium, leo ac pellentesque mollis, felis nunc ultrices eros, sed gravida augue augue mollis justo. Suspendisse eu ligula. Nulla facilisi. Donec id justo. Praesent porttitor, nulla vitae posuere iaculis, arcu nisl dignissim dolor, a pretium mi sem ut ipsum. Curabitur suscipit suscipit tellus.
Praesent vestibulum dapibus nibh. Etiam iaculis nunc ac metus. Ut id nisl quis enim dignissim sagittis. Etiam sollicitudin, ipsum eu pulvinar rutrum, tellus ipsum laoreet sapien, quis venenatis ante odio sit amet eros. Proin magna. Duis vel nibh at velit scelerisque suscipit. Curabitur turpis. Vestibulum suscipit nulla quis orci. Fusce ac felis sit amet ligula pharetra condimentum. Maecenas egestas arcu quis ligula mattis placerat. Duis lobortis massa imperdiet quam. Suspendisse potenti.
Pellentesque commodo eros a enim. Vestibulum turpis sem, aliquet eget, lobortis pellentesque, rutrum eu, nisl. Sed libero. Aliquam erat volutpat. Etiam vitae tortor. Morbi vestibulum volutpat enim. Aliquam eu nunc. Nunc sed turpis. Sed mollis, eros et ultrices tempus, mauris ipsum aliquam libero, non adipiscing dolor urna a orci. Nulla porta dolor. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos.
Pellentesque dapibus hendrerit tortor. Praesent egestas tristique nibh. Sed a libero. Cras varius. Donec vitae orci sed dolor rutrum auctor. Fusce egestas elit eget lorem. Suspendisse nisl elit, rhoncus eget, elementum ac, condimentum eget, diam. Nam at tortor in tellus interdum sagittis. Aliquam lobortis. Donec orci lectus, aliquam ut, faucibus non, euismod id, nulla. Curabitur blandit mollis lacus. Nam adipiscing. Vestibulum eu odio.
Vivamus laoreet. Nullam tincidunt adipiscing enim. Phasellus tempus. Proin viverra, ligula sit amet ultrices semper, ligula arcu tristique sapien, a accumsan nisi mauris ac eros. Fusce neque. Suspendisse faucibus, nunc et pellentesque egestas, lacus ante convallis tellus, vitae iaculis lacus elit id tortor. Vivamus aliquet elit ac nisl. Fusce fermentum odio nec arcu. Vivamus euismod mauris. In ut quam vitae odio lacinia tincidunt. Praesent ut ligula non mi varius sagittis. Cras sagittis. Praesent ac sem eget est egestas volutpat. Vivamus consectetuer hendrerit lacus. Cras non dolor. Vivamus in erat ut urna cursus vestibulum. Fusce commodo aliquam arcu. Nam commodo suscipit quam. Quisque id odio. Praesent venenatis metus at tortor pulvinar varius. |
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tomson
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Stylzz
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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aenean commodo ligula eget dolor. Aenean massa. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Donec quam felis, ultricies nec, pellentesque eu, pretium quis, sem. Nulla consequat massa quis enim. Donec pede justo, fringilla vel, aliquet nec, vulputate eget, arcu. In enim justo, rhoncus ut, imperdiet a, venenatis vitae, justo. Nullam dictum felis eu pede mollis pretium. Integer tincidunt. Cras dapibus. Vivamus elementum semper nisi. Aenean vulputate eleifend tellus. Aenean leo ligula, porttitor eu, consequat vitae, eleifend ac, enim. Aliquam lorem ante, dapibus in, viverra quis, feugiat a, tellus. Phasellus viverra nulla ut metus varius laoreet. Quisque rutrum. Aenean imperdiet. Etiam ultricies nisi vel augue. Curabitur ullamcorper ultricies nisi. Nam eget dui.
Etiam rhoncus. Maecenas tempus, tellus eget condimentum rhoncus, sem quam semper libero, sit amet adipiscing sem neque sed ipsum. Nam quam nunc, blandit vel, luctus pulvinar, hendrerit id, lorem. Maecenas nec odio et ante tincidunt tempus. Donec vitae sapien ut libero venenatis faucibus. Nullam quis ante. Etiam sit amet orci eget eros faucibus tincidunt. Duis leo. Sed fringilla mauris sit amet nibh. Donec sodales sagittis magna. Sed consequat, leo eget bibendum sodales, augue velit cursus nunc, quis gravida magna mi a libero. Fusce vulputate eleifend sapien. Vestibulum purus quam, scelerisque ut, mollis sed, nonummy id, metus. Nullam accumsan lorem in dui. Cras ultricies mi eu turpis hendrerit fringilla. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; In ac dui quis mi consectetuer lacinia.
Nam pretium turpis et arcu. Duis arcu tortor, suscipit eget, imperdiet nec, imperdiet iaculis, ipsum. Sed aliquam ultrices mauris. Integer ante arcu, accumsan a, consectetuer eget, posuere ut, mauris. Praesent adipiscing. Phasellus ullamcorper ipsum rutrum nunc. Nunc nonummy metus. Vestibulum volutpat pretium libero. Cras id dui. Aenean ut eros et nisl sagittis vestibulum. Nullam nulla eros, ultricies sit amet, nonummy id, imperdiet feugiat, pede. Sed lectus. Donec mollis hendrerit risus. Phasellus nec sem in justo pellentesque facilisis. Etiam imperdiet imperdiet orci. Nunc nec neque. Phasellus leo dolor, tempus non, auctor et, hendrerit quis, nisi.
Curabitur ligula sapien, tincidunt non, euismod vitae, posuere imperdiet, leo. Maecenas malesuada. Praesent congue erat at massa. Sed cursus turpis vitae tortor. Donec posuere vulputate arcu. Phasellus accumsan cursus velit. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Sed aliquam, nisi quis porttitor congue, elit erat euismod orci, ac placerat dolor lectus quis orci. Phasellus consectetuer vestibulum elit. Aenean tellus metus, bibendum sed, posuere ac, mattis non, nunc. Vestibulum fringilla pede sit amet augue. In turpis. Pellentesque posuere. Praesent turpis.
Aenean posuere, tortor sed cursus feugiat, nunc augue blandit nunc, eu sollicitudin urna dolor sagittis lacus. Donec elit libero, sodales nec, volutpat a, suscipit non, turpis. Nullam sagittis. Suspendisse pulvinar, augue ac venenatis condimentum, sem libero volutpat nibh, nec pellentesque velit pede quis nunc. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Fusce id purus. Ut varius tincidunt libero. Phasellus dolor. Maecenas vestibulum mollis diam. Pellentesque ut neque. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas.
In dui magna, posuere eget, vestibulum et, tempor auctor, justo. In ac felis quis tortor malesuada pretium. Pellentesque auctor neque nec urna. Proin sapien ipsum, porta a, auctor quis, euismod ut, mi. Aenean viverra rhoncus pede. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Ut non enim eleifend felis pretium feugiat. Vivamus quis mi. Phasellus a est. Phasellus magna.
In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Curabitur at lacus ac velit ornare lobortis. Curabitur a felis in nunc fringilla tristique. Morbi mattis ullamcorper velit. Phasellus gravida semper nisi. Nullam vel sem. Pellentesque libero tortor, tincidunt et, tincidunt eget, semper nec, quam. Sed hendrerit. Morbi ac felis. Nunc egestas, augue at pellentesque laoreet, felis eros vehicula leo, at malesuada velit leo quis pede. Donec interdum, metus et hendrerit aliquet, dolor diam sagittis ligula, eget egestas libero turpis vel mi. Nunc nulla. Fusce risus nisl, viverra et, tempor et, pretium in, sapien. Donec venenatis vulputate lorem.
Morbi nec metus. Phasellus blandit leo ut odio. Maecenas ullamcorper, dui et placerat feugiat, eros pede varius nisi, condimentum viverra felis nunc et lorem. Sed magna purus, fermentum eu, tincidunt eu, varius ut, felis. In auctor lobortis lacus. Quisque libero metus, condimentum nec, tempor a, commodo mollis, magna. Vestibulum ullamcorper mauris at ligula. Fusce fermentum. Nullam cursus lacinia erat. Praesent blandit laoreet nibh.
Fusce convallis metus id felis luctus adipiscing. Pellentesque egestas, neque sit amet convallis pulvinar, justo nulla eleifend augue, ac auctor orci leo non est. Quisque id mi. Ut tincidunt tincidunt erat. Etiam feugiat lorem non metus. Vestibulum dapibus nunc ac augue. Curabitur vestibulum aliquam leo. Praesent egestas neque eu enim. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Fusce a quam. Etiam ut purus mattis mauris sodales aliquam. Curabitur nisi. Quisque malesuada placerat nisl. Nam ipsum risus, rutrum vitae, vestibulum eu, molestie vel, lacus.
Sed augue ipsum, egestas nec, vestibulum et, malesuada adipiscing, dui. Vestibulum facilisis, purus nec pulvinar iaculis, ligula mi congue nunc, vitae euismod ligula urna in dolor. Mauris sollicitudin fermentum libero. Praesent nonummy mi in odio. Nunc interdum lacus sit amet orci. Vestibulum rutrum, mi nec elementum vehicula, eros quam gravida nisl, id fringilla neque ante vel mi. Morbi mollis tellus ac sapien. Phasellus volutpat, metus eget egestas mollis, lacus lacus blandit dui, id egestas quam mauris ut lacus. Fusce vel dui. Sed in libero ut nibh placerat accumsan. Proin faucibus arcu quis ante. In consectetuer turpis ut velit. Nulla sit amet est. Praesent metus tellus, elementum eu, semper a, adipiscing nec, purus. Cras risus ipsum, faucibus ut, ullamcorper id, varius ac, leo. Suspendisse feugiat. Suspendisse enim turpis, dictum sed, iaculis a, condimentum nec, nisi. Praesent nec nisl a purus blandit viverra. Praesent ac massa at ligula laoreet iaculis. Nulla neque dolor, sagittis eget, iaculis quis, molestie non, velit.
Mauris turpis nunc, blandit et, volutpat molestie, porta ut, ligula. Fusce pharetra convallis urna. Quisque ut nisi. Donec mi odio, faucibus at, scelerisque quis, convallis in, nisi. Suspendisse non nisl sit amet velit hendrerit rutrum. Ut leo. Ut a nisl id ante tempus hendrerit. Proin pretium, leo ac pellentesque mollis, felis nunc ultrices eros, sed gravida augue augue mollis justo. Suspendisse eu ligula. Nulla facilisi. Donec id justo. Praesent porttitor, nulla vitae posuere iaculis, arcu nisl dignissim dolor, a pretium mi sem ut ipsum. Curabitur suscipit suscipit tellus.
Praesent vestibulum dapibus nibh. Etiam iaculis nunc ac metus. Ut id nisl quis enim dignissim sagittis. Etiam sollicitudin, ipsum eu pulvinar rutrum, tellus ipsum laoreet sapien, quis venenatis ante odio sit amet eros. Proin magna. Duis vel nibh at velit scelerisque suscipit. Curabitur turpis. Vestibulum suscipit nulla quis orci. Fusce ac felis sit amet ligula pharetra condimentum. Maecenas egestas arcu quis ligula mattis placerat. Duis lobortis massa imperdiet quam. Suspendisse potenti.
Pellentesque commodo eros a enim. Vestibulum turpis sem, aliquet eget, lobortis pellentesque, rutrum eu, nisl. Sed libero. Aliquam erat volutpat. Etiam vitae tortor. Morbi vestibulum volutpat enim. Aliquam eu nunc. Nunc sed turpis. Sed mollis, eros et ultrices tempus, mauris ipsum aliquam libero, non adipiscing dolor urna a orci. Nulla porta dolor. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos.
Pellentesque dapibus hendrerit tortor. Praesent egestas tristique nibh. Sed a libero. Cras varius. Donec vitae orci sed dolor rutrum auctor. Fusce egestas elit eget lorem. Suspendisse nisl elit, rhoncus eget, elementum ac, condimentum eget, diam. Nam at tortor in tellus interdum sagittis. Aliquam lobortis. Donec orci lectus, aliquam ut, faucibus non, euismod id, nulla. Curabitur blandit mollis lacus. Nam adipiscing. Vestibulum eu odio.
Vivamus laoreet. Nullam tincidunt adipiscing enim. Phasellus tempus. Proin viverra, ligula sit amet ultrices semper, ligula arcu tristique sapien, a accumsan nisi mauris ac eros. Fusce neque. Suspendisse faucibus, nunc et pellentesque egestas, lacus ante convallis tellus, vitae iaculis lacus elit id tortor. Vivamus aliquet elit ac nisl. Fusce fermentum odio nec arcu. Vivamus euismod mauris. In ut quam vitae odio lacinia tincidunt. Praesent ut ligula non mi varius sagittis. Cras sagittis. Praesent ac sem eget est egestas volutpat. Vivamus consectetuer hendrerit lacus. Cras non dolor. Vivamus in erat ut urna cursus vestibulum. Fusce commodo aliquam arcu. Nam commodo suscipit quam. Quisque id odio. Praesent venenatis metus at tortor pulvinar varius. |
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sevillana
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weer een nieuwe nar op dit forum.. |
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Stylzz
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-Bilal-
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He Dirk succes. Volgend jaar lach ik weer met de vierde plaats Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa |
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van geil
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sevillana
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negeer modus maar doen dan? |
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Stylzz
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Test scripting has been a popular way to build testware since the advent of interactive software. With Graphical User Interfaces and web-based interfaces, the use of test scripts should be carefully considered. In some cases, test scripts may apply very well to object and component-based interfaces, while in other cases they may not apply well at all. This article examines the nature of test cases and how to determine the best vehicle for designing a test in the web-based environment.
Understanding the Components of a Web Test Case
Test terminology has reached the point where people use a variety of terms in non-standard ways. One of the most inconsistently used test terms is that of a "test case." There are several definitions I could use for test cases, but the one I like the best is used in IEEE Standard 829-1998. In this definition, a test case is comprised of a test condition, an expected result, and a procedure for performing the test case.
I like this definition because it implies that test cases can be performed either in combination with other test cases or in isolation. This is an important distinction when testing web interfaces, which allow a user to perform actions in a random and unpredictable manner.
Modular test cases are like objects which can be performed in isolation but often have the requirement of interfacing with other test cases to achieve a particular objective. The important concept to remember is that the sequence of performing test cases may be unpredictable from the test designer's perspective, but can be critical in manifesting a defect.
How to Determine When to Use Test Cases vs. Test Scripts
When deciding to use test cases vs. test scripts, its much like deciding to take a guided tour of a museum or browse around on your own. Much depends on how much time you have, your prior knowledge of what you're viewing and the freedom you would like to have during the experience.
Likewise, in the decision of using test scripts vs. test cases, much depends on the context of the application youre testing. This could include the testers level of knowledge of the application, the amount of freedom the user is intended to have in using the web application and the amount of time available for testing.
The decision to use test cases versus test scripts depends on: The level of predictability of how a user will interact with a web interface The importance of sequence in the users correct performance of a task The degree of freedom a user is intended to have in interacting with a web interface The importance of documenting a test of a specified sequence The intensity of the test
The main benefit of a test script is that it predefines a procedure to follow in performing a test. This can also be its greatest curse. Sometimes you want the randomness of user actions. At the same time, you want to know in advance the conditions to be tested and how they should behave. This is the classic tradeoff between test scripts and test cases.
Just because you choose to use a test script in testing one area of your application does not imply you must use test scripts for testing everything in an application. You may choose to only create test scripts for the definable processes that are critical and that apply well to scripting. For everything else you could decide to use test cases.
The Sources of Web Test Cases
Many web testers describe the process of testing web applications as trying to hit a moving target. Just when you think you have things in place, they change. In fluid development environments like the web, software development happens quickly and functionality can change just a quickly. Sometimes the testers know what the web application requirements are, but many times the requirements tend to take shape over time as developers and the customer/users interact.
Before we can define a test case, we need to know how the web application is intended to behave. There are many sources of test cases in a typical web application and I will examine the ones that give you the best results with the least amount of effort in test case design and execution.
Web Test Case Components
The structure of test cases is one of the things that stays remarkably the same regardless of the technology being tested. The conditions to be tested may differ greatly from one technology to the next, but you still need to know three basic things about what you plan to test:
ID #: This is a unique identifier for the test case. The identifier does not imply a sequential order of test execution in most cases. The test case ID can also be intelligent. For example, the test case ID of ORD001 could indicate a test case for the ordering process on the first web page.
Condition: This is an event that should produce an observable result. For example, in an e-commerce application, if the user selects an overnight shipping option, the correct charge should be added to the total of the transaction. A test designer would want to test all shipping options, with each option giving a different amount added to the transaction total.
Expected Result: This is the observable result from invoking a test condition. If you cant observe a result, you cant determine if a test passes or fails. In the previous example of an e-commerce shipping option, the expected results would be specifically defined according to the type of shipping the user selects.
Procedure: This is the process a tester needs to perform to invoke the condition and observe the results. A test case procedure should be limited to the steps needed to perform a single test case.
Pass/Fail: This is where the tester indicates the outcome of the test case. For the purpose of space, I typically use the same column to indicate both "pass" (P) and "fail" (F). In some situations, such as the regulated environment, simply indicating pass or fail is not enough information about the outcome of a test case to provide adequate documentation. For this reason, some people choose to also add a column for "Observed Results."
Defect Number Cross-reference: If you identify a defect in the execution of a test case, this component of the test case gives you a way to link the test case to a specific defect report.
Sample Business Rule
A customer may select one of the following options for shipping when ordering products. The shipping cost will be based on product price before sales tax and the method of shipment according to the table below.
If no shipping method is selected, the customer receives an error message, "Please select a shipping option." The ordering process cannot continue until the shipping option has been selected and confirmed.
Cost Less than $20 $20 $29.99 $30 39.99 $40 and greater Shipping Method Overnight $12.00 $16.00 $22.00 $27.00 2-day air $8.00 $8.00 $4.00 $0 USPS $6.00 $6.00 $6.00 $0
The table below shows how the shipping options of an e-commerce application could be independently tested.
ID # Test Condition Expected Result Procedure Pass/ Fail Defect ID # 1. Customer orders products totaling less than $20 and selects overnight shipping. Shipping charge of $12 is applied. 1. Customer accesses secure ordering page. 2. Customer adds items to shopping cart totaling less than $20.
3. Customer selects "overnight shipping" as delivery option.
4. Customer confirms items in shopping cart, shipping options, and transaction total.
2. Customer orders products totaling less than $30 and greater than $20 and selects overnight shipping. Shipping charge of $16 is applied. 1. Customer accesses secure ordering page. 2. Customer adds items to shopping cart totaling $29.99.
3. Customer selects "overnight shipping" as delivery option.
4. Customer confirms items in shopping cart, shipping options, and transaction total.
Table 1 - Test Case Examples
Things to Notice in This Example
1. Specific test data is not embedded in the case.
The test designer did not specify "1 copy of Gone With The Wind (paperback), 1 CD of Hootie and the Blowfish (sale priced at $3.99) and one poster of Aniken Skywalker. Why? Because in these test cases the items ordered only affect the observed result as a total, not individually.
Theres another reason to keep specific data separate from the test case. That is to reduce the amount of maintenance to the test cases should either the test procedure or test data change.
Consider this situation. We design 1,000 test cases with the only difference being the test data. Then, the web developer calls and informs you that an additional step needs to be added to the process. Normally it would not be a big deal to make a procedural change. It becomes a big deal, however, when the change is multiplied times 1,000! In keeping the data and the test case separate, we would only need to change one test case and probably not change the test data at all.
At this point you might be wondering where the test data reside and how to know the expected results. There are a variety of ways to create and maintain test data, but it could be as simple as creating a PC-based database or spreadsheet. The test data can then be obtained manually through a cross-reference, can be imported into an automated test tool, or can be entered into the application using a home-grown scripting procedure.
2. There is no sequence implied or necessary for the test cases.
The important thing is that all of the conditions are tested, not necessarily the sequence. Consider the scenario where a customer selects a certain form of shipping and then decides to select a less expensive option. While it is possible to script such a scenario, the possible combinations of such scenarios can be overwhelming and not very profitable when it comes to a return on your testing investment.
3. The order of the columns is up to you.
I like the format shown in the test case examples, but you might like to see the test procedure before the expected result. The important thing is to define a format and stay consistent. Consistency in items such as test cases and test scripts helps to avoid confusion during both test design and test execution.
Test Case Design Strategies for Web Applications
In the search for the best way to test your web application, you will likely have several possible approaches. It's difficult sometimes to decide which test case development approach will eventually work best, but here are some common test case strategies. The intent of this discussion is to focus on how to develop testware using a variety of approaches, many of which have been effective in other technologies and are still useful in testing web-based applications.
To arrive at the approach that works best for you, you will need to consider: The type of application to be tested.
For example, if the application is very procedural, test scripts may be a primary means for designing your tests. The nature of the intended users
If you are testing the usability of an e-commerce application, you will need to consider that the eventual customers will not have the benefit of training and detailed written procedures. This would be an example of when to use test cases that give the tester a great deal of flexibility in testing. The need to repeat the test
Although there is a degree of error inherent with manual testing, well-defined test cases and test scripts give you at least some trail to follow if you ever need to repeat the test. A test script is probably the best manual vehicle to document a trail of actions, but you can also document a process with test cases ordered sequentially by using a test matrix. The level of relative risk
The higher the degree of risk, the more rigorous the test should be. In high-risk applications, the test needs to be documented at a high level of detail. This implies the use of well-defined test cases and test scripts. The degree of change
If the web application is changing rapidly and continuously, your investment in documented test cases and test scripts may prove to be overwhelming. While automated test tools can provide some relief, there are still issues in actually getting the tool integrated into your web development processes. Even with test automation, the job of test case development and defining the process to be tested is still largely a manual effort for many people.
Each of the following approaches to design web-based test cases has its strengths and weaknesses.
Test Scripts
Test scripts became popular when mainframe applications went interactive. These procedural "green screen" types of interfaces are typically very predicable in nature and the user is not given much latitude in how they can interact with the application. These procedural user interfaces gave rise to written, or manual, test scripts that told the user what to enter in each screen field, then to go to the next field, etc.
Then came the Graphical User Interface (GUI). With the advent of the GUI came the promise, and sometimes the ability, of the user to work according to their own preferences and not necessarily to a rigid procedure. The impact on test planning is that it may impossible to predict all the ways a user may perform a process while using a GUI.
Web pages tend to be visually-oriented and strive to deliver the same type of user flexibility as a client/server GUI. In addition to the web browser GUI, a typical web page may contain:
Hyperlinks COM objects Active-X controls JAVA applets And many other functions that are accessed by "point and click" user actions.
You might be asking, "But what about GUI automated test tools? Don't they use recorded test scripts as the primary means for testing?"
Yes, they do. Each script follows one path through a process, or on a smaller level, each script describes a sub-process in a modular manner. Modularity does a lot to help reduce the large numbers of test scripts required for some GUIs, but you can still only describe so many combinations of possible actions before you run out of time, people or money.
The issue is whether or not you need to predefine a sequential order of actions for testing a particular process. Since a test script describes sequence, actions and expected results, the level of interface "randomness" affects the effectiveness of test scripting. Before we decide to eliminate test scripts as a tool for testing web applications, there are some important considerations:
Is the process to be performed in a web application predictable or random?
Some processes delivered via a web-based application are very predictable. The user points and clicks on objects, but there are clearly defined steps that must be completed before the process is considered complete.
In the case of a predictable process delivered via a web application, test scripts can be used effectively. An example of this is ordering a product from a web site. Although the customer clicks on the "next" and "back" buttons, they must still enter required information and follow a defined path to ensure a correct order. Sure, exceptional situations will occur that also need to be anticipated and tested. These might include a lost connection, a timeout, or the customer aborting the order.
Can the users of the web application be profiled?
If you can categorize users by how they approach and use a web application, then you can predict usage patterns. One approach to profiling user patters is to observe a diverse group of typical users or customers and look for common paths taken by them.
I have found that in some cases you can define the most commonly taken paths through a web application with less than a dozen test scripts. Can the web application design be simplified?
One of the reasons software, web-based or otherwise, is difficult to test is that it is often too complex to test completely. Sometimes a few basic design simplification decisions help reduce the complexity of testing.
Test scripting can involve a variety of forms and methods. I've seen about as many test script standards as I have seen testers. To illustrate, here is a sample manual test script format. This test script format is designed to handle tests that are isolated to one page in the web application, or that span multiple pages of the application as well as other system processes over a given period of time.
Moving Into Automation
The reason I have laid the foundation in manual test cases and test scripts is because much test analysis requires getting the manual process documented first. The main point in automating tests is the ability to repeat them later. The best thing you can do to facilitate repeatable tests is to plan them to be repeatable. This implies thinking about modularity and keeping scripts free of embedded data except where absolutely essential. In other words, let's take time at the beginning and define the problem before we immediately start solving it.
Once you have the manual concepts mastered and once you have some idea of the processes and cases you want to automate, then you are ready to start thinking about automating the test. There are also other things to consider, such as naming conventions, test script management, etc.
Actually, this is where we arrive at where we started this discussion: using test cases to design a modular test. Once we can define the triggering events (test conditions) and have a way to observe the outcome (expected results), then we can design and perform a test, whether it be manual or automated.
An exciting advancement in test automation is that some of the tools are able to generate test cases automatically from the web interface. That's a step in the right direction, but there is still a need to define tests that span interfaces, such as in the case of ordering a product. It's the integration of functions that give test designers their greatest challenge. |
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alexis gonzalez
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quote:Op zondag 19 april 2015 - 20:31 schreef -Bilal- het volgende:He Dirk succes. Volgend jaar lach ik weer met de vierde plaats Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Plek 4?
Met wat pech heb je een leegloop en mogen we blij zijn met het linkerrijtje |
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AccessRd.vbs 1.01 Read MS-Access database files without using MS-Access 2008-03-14 Requires MDAC 2.8. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source AddIPPrn.bat 1.01 Install a printer with a TCP/IP printer port on a remote computer 2006-01-31 Requires PRNADMIN.DLL. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source ADSITest.hta 0.20 Test and debug ADSI queries 2007-06-19 Requires ADSI client software. This HTA combines several sample script from Don Jones' book VBScript, WMI, and ADSI Unleashed: Using VBScript, WMI, and ADSI to Automate Windows Administration. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source AllHelp.vbs 3.24 Display help for "all" Windows commands in HTML 2013-11-25 More details and samples of generated HTML pages on my AllHelp page. Use version 2.12 (included in the ZIP file) for "legacy" Windows versions (XP and before). Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source APIPA.vbs 1.00 Disable APIPA on all local network adapters 2008-01-09 Make sure you understand what this script will do before you confirm its action! Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ASCII2UC.vbs 1.00 Convert ASCII text files to Unicode 2006-07-30 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source B64Coder.vbs Base64 encode/decode files 2007-04-11 Requires Belus Technology's X-Base64 component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Bin2Vbs.vbs 1.00 Convert a (small) binary file into VBScript code that can recreate that file 2008-10-23 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source BIOS.vbs 1.00 Display BIOS information 2002-11-30 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source BirdName.hta 2.12 Translate animal species (chordata) names from one language to (m)any other language(s) 2013-11-14 Uses Wikipedia. Optional automatic on-the-fly update feature. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source BirdName.vbs 1.01 Use Wikipedia to translate a bird name from one language to another 2011-12-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source BookFind.vbs 1.11 Look up book title and author for a specified ISBN number 2006-08-20 This script uses Amazon.com to look up books Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source BootDriv.vbs 1.00 Return boot drive letter 2003-01-06 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source BrFolder.vbs 1.00 Open a "Browse Folder" dialog 2007-03-30 Based on the Hey Scripting Guys article How Can I Show Users a Dialog Box That Only Lets Them Select Folders? Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source CalDemo.hta 1.01 Demonstration of Microsoft's Calendar HTML Component 2007-02-09 Automatically checks for updates and availability of control component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CanonReport.vbs 1.01 Display a report for a Canon IR3320 printer's total print output 2007-12-24 May or may not work on other Canon printer models too. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CapsLock.vbs 1.01 Use MS Word or WordPerfect to display the CapsLock status 2007-12-15 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CDEject.vbs 1.00 Eject all CD-ROMs on the local computer 2002-12-31 Requires Windows Media Player. Posted by Christoph Fricke on a newsgroup;. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CDROM.vbs 1.10 Display all CD-ROM drive letters 2002-11-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ChDefPrn.vbs 1.00 Open a print dialog to change the default printer 2007-04-23 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CheckRes.vbs 1.01 Check if the screen resolution meets a specified minimum requirement, and exit with return code 1 if not 2010-09-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CloneDate.vbs 2.11 Modify the timestamp of the specified target file(s) to match the specified source file's timestamp 2012-04-22 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Coder.vbs 1.00 Encode/encrypt & decode/decrypt text files 2007-04-10 This is a very basic encoding algorythm! Use it at your own risk. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ComDlg32.vbs 1.00 Demo script showing several dialogs 2010-05-31 Requires ComDlg32.ocx. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ComDlgCP.vbs 1.00 Color Picker dialog 2010-05-31 Requires ComDlg32.ocx. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ComDlgFN.vbs 1.00 Font Select dialog 2010-05-31 Requires ComDlg32.ocx. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ComDlgFO.vbs 1.00 File Open dialog 2010-05-31 Requires ComDlg32.ocx. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ComDlgFS.vbs 1.00 File Save dialog 2010-05-31 Requires ComDlg32.ocx. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source COMPorts.vbs 1.00 Display serial ports information 2003-01-03 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPULoad.vbs 1.00 Display CPU load information 2005-02-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPULoadTD.vbs 1.00 Display CPU load information in tab delimited format 2005-02-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPUSpeed.vbs 1.00 Display CPU speed for each processor 2005-02-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPUSpeedTD.vbs 1.00 Display CPU speed for each processor in tab delimited format 2005-02-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPUType.vbs 1.00 Display CPU type 2005-02-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source CPUTypeTD.vbs 1.00 Display CPU type 2005-02-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Date2ISO.vbs 1.02 Convert any date/time to ISO date/time format 2011-03-18 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Date2UTC.vbs 1.00 Convert any date/time to Unix time (UTC) 2011-03-18 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Dec2Hex.vbs 1.00 Convert a decimal number to 8 digit hexadecimal 2002-11-13 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DefPrn.vbs 1.00 Display default printer and port 2003-02-02 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelayRun.vbs 1.02 Start a program with a delay 2007-12-28 Use this script to modify the shortcuts in your Startup folder to prevent a "traffic jam" at login time Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelFlash.vbs 1.00 Delete "Local Stored Objects", also known as "Flash Cookies", from the current user's profile 2007-09-17 Tested on Windows XP SP2 only. Use entirely at your own risk! Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelTemp.vbs 2.00 Empty the TEMP directory and IE cache, and optionally also IE/document history, cookies and/or favorites, without prompting for confirmation, or remove only TEMP files older than the specified number of days 2009-09-17 Warning: this script has gone through limited testing only; read the on screen warning by running the script with the /? switch Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelTemp3.vbs 3.00 Empty the TEMP directory and IE cache, and optionally also IE/document history, cookies and/or favorites, without prompting for confirmation, or remove only TEMP files older than the specified number of days 2010-05-14 Windows 7 version: /CD purges files waiting to be burned to CD Warning: this script has gone through limited testing only; read the on screen warning by running the script with the /? switch Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelTrash.vbs 0.50 Empty the recycle bin without prompting for confirmation 2007-06-16 Warning: this script has gone through limited testing only; read the on screen warning by running the script with the /? switch Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DelTrash2.vbs 1.00 Empty the recycle bin without prompting for confirmation, or remove only files older than the specified number of days 2007-06-17 Requires Tim Tabor' BinManager. Based on Tim Tabor's JScript sample. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DispEDID.vbs 2.30 Display the monitor's EDID asset information 2010-05-27 Based on a script by Michael Baird (link no longer available) Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DiskTypes.vbs 1.00 BETA List disk drives and their interface type (IDE/SATA/SCSI/USB/USB3) and capacity 2012-08-07 Differentiates between IDE/SATA, and USB/USB3 based on the controllers' description fields Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source DPPEEE.vbs 1.11 Temporarily change an Asus EEE PC's screen resolution to 1024x768 to allow running Canon's Digital Photo Professional software 2010-10-09 Requires SetRes. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Easter.vbs 1.01 Calculate Easter Day for a specified year 2002-12-30 Based on the instructions found at Simon Kershaw's Keeping The Feast. Try Holidays.hta if you need to check other holidays' dates too. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source EjectCD.vbs 1.00 Eject the CD-ROM from the specified drive 2006-12-26 Use CDEject.vbs instead if you want to eject all CDs. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Excel2XML.vbs 1.21 Convert Excel sheet to XML 2013-11-04 Requires Microsoft XMLDOM. Does not require Excel. Formerly known as XL2XML.vbs. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ExcelRd.vbs 3.00 Read Excel files without using Excel 2012-07-20 Requires MDAC 2.8. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Extract.vbs 1.00 Extract files from archives (ZIP, CAB, etc) 2007-04-17 Can also be used to copy folders with progress bar and optional confirmation dialogs. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source FileDetails.vbs 1.00 List file details in the local language 2014-08-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source FileDiff.vbs 1.00 Check if 2 files differ in size, timestamp or version 2008-06-05 Version check will work for program files only Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source FoxitVer.vbs 2.00 Read Foxit Reader's latest available version number from its version history page 2012-08-08 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source FreeSpace.vbs 1.00 Display a disk space summary 2002-10-12 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source FTP_Upld.vbs 1.01 Upload a file using FTP 2012-07-20 Requires ChilkatFTP ActiveX component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GConv.vbs 1.10 Convert units using Google Calculator and Internet Explorer 2010-07-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GeoIPDemo.vbs 1.00 Retrieve geographical information for host names or IP addresses 2009-04-30 Requires MaxMind's GeoIP COM wrapper and Franz Krainer's System Scripting Runtime. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source GetDate.hta 0.13 Calculate dates like "what date will Wednesday week 23 be in 2017?", or "what day of the week is the 30th of next month?" 2010-11-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetDDE.vbs 1.00 List all DDE commands for all registered file types 2008-07-04 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetFoldr.vbs 1.00 Displays a "Select Folder" dialog and returns the fully qualified path of the selected folder 2010-05-30 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetPrint.vbs 2.01 List Print and PrintTo commands for all registered file types 2008-06-19 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetRAM.vbs 1.10 Display the amount of physical memory installed 2002-11-03 Based on WMI Scripting Primer: Part 1 by Greg Stemp, Dean Tsaltas and Bob Wells. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetRes.vbs 1.00 Display screen resolution and refresh rate 2003-01-09 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetRunDL.vbs 1.00 List all RUNDLL32 commands for file associations from the registry 2007-01-01 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetSID.vbs 1.00 Display a user's Security ID 2005-12-03 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetTxtType.vbs 1.00 Check a text file's text encoding 2011-04-13 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GetUnins.vbs 3.01 List or find uninstall commands 2012-02-01 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source GMT.vbs 1.10 Return GMT time for the current or specified local time 2011-04-11 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Hardware.hta 6.02 Display basic as well as detailed hardware summaries 2015-03-26 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Hardware.vbs 2.00 Display a basic hardware summary 2013-01-11 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Holidays.hta 3.12 Calculate the dates for future and past holidays 2013-05-24 Also available as on-line PHP version Optional automatic on-the-fly update feature. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source HotFixes.vbs 1.00 Display installed hotfixes 2002-11-26 Based entirely on a (no longer available) sample script from Microsoft TechNet Script Center Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source HotFixesTD.vbs 1.00 Display installed hotfixes in tab delimited format for any WMI enabled computer on the network 2002-11-26 Based entirely on a (no longer available) sample script from Microsoft TechNet Script Center Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source iCountry.vbs 1.01 Return the country name for the specified country code 2010-08-30 Translates country codes found in the registry to their English names. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IEButtons.vbs 1.11 Use IE to present a dialog window with multiple buttons 2013-11-07 Written by Denis St-Pierre. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IEChgPwd.vbs 2.11 Use IE to present a change password dialog 2013-11-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IELogin.vbs 1.21 Use IE to present a login dialog 2013-11-07 Almost identical to IELogin3.vbs, IELogin3.vbs can be used combined with batch files and has improved error handling (by Denis St-Pierre). Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IELogin3.vbs 3.11 Use IE to present a login dialog 2013-11-07 Almost identical to IELogin.vbs, IELogin3.vbs can be used combined with batch files and has improved error handling (by Denis St-Pierre). Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IEPwdDlg.vbs 2.11 Use IE to prompt for password 2013-11-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IEUserIn.vbs 2.11 Use IE to prompt for user input 2013-11-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source INIFuncs.vbs 1.01 Demo script for VBScript functions to read, create and modify INI files 2007-08-23 Written by Keith Lacelle, modified by Denis St-Pierre, Johan Pol and yours truly Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source is6432os.vbs 1.00 Check if a Windows is 32-bit or 64-bit 2010-07-04 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IsDST.vbs 1.10 Check if the current or specified date/time is in Daylight saving Time 2011-04-11 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IsLaptop.vbs 1.00 Check if a computer is a laptop 2007-03-23 Uses the Win32_Battery WMI class to check for a battery. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ISO2Date.vbs 1.00 Convert an ISO date/time to the current user's default date/time format 2011-03-17 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ISO2UTC.vbs 1.00 Convert an ISO date/time to Unix time (UTC) 2011-03-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source IsSiteUp.vbs 1.00 Check if a website is up-and-running 2007-03-19 Requires X-HTTP component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source KillProg.vbs 1.01 Kill the specified program on any WMI enabled computer on the network 2002-10-18 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source KixINI.vbs 1.00 Use KiXtart COM object to read or write INI files 2010-07-01 Requires KiXtart 4.61. KIXTART.DLL must be registered. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LastBoot.vbs 2.00 Display the last boot time 2009-09-25 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LeapYear.vbs 1.00 Check if the specified year is a leap year 2002-10-08 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ListCert.vbs 0.10 List certificates on the local computer 2008-01-07 ALPHA version! A first exploration of working with certificates using CAPICOM Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ListWMIClasses.vbs 3.01 List all available WMI classes for the specified (or default) namespace 2011-08-04 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LockKitt.vbs 1.01 Flash CapsLock, NumLock and ScrollLock LEDs from left to right and back again 2004-01-11 Ends after 15 seconds. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LockLoop.vbs 1.00 Flash CapsLock, NumLock and ScrollLock LEDs from left to right in loops 2003-12-31 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LockRand.vbs 1.00 Flash CapsLock, NumLock and ScrollLock LEDs at random 2003-12-31 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LockSnak.vbs 1.00 Flash CapsLock, NumLock and ScrollLock LEDs crawling like a snake 2004-01-02 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Logoff.vbs 1.00 Logoff current user 2002-10-19 Adapted from posts by Alex K. Angelopoulos on Developersdex and Michael Harris on the Microsoft VBScript newsgroup. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LookupURL.vbs 1.00 Display the destination URL for a redirected URL 2012-12-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source LstOffVw.vbs 1.00 List all Office Viewers and their version numbers 2008-05-17 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source MD.vbs 1.00 Create multi-level new folders like CMD.EXE's MD does 2007-09-13 Written by Todd Reeves, UNC functionality added by myself Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source MDACVer.vbs 1.00 Display the currently installed MDAC version, and optionally check if it meets a required minimum version 2008-05-07 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source MSInfoVB.vbs 1.00 Write a full MSInfo report to a file 2007-04-23 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source NICSpeed.vbs 1.00 Display ethernet adapter's link speed 2006-01-06 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source NSWhoIs.vbs 1.00 Query WHOIS for domain registration information 2007-04-27 Also available as a class and component Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source OffVer.vbs 1.00 List version/build number for all Microsoft Office programs 2009-08-05 Tested only in Windows XP SP3 with MS-Office 2007 SP2. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PausePrinting.vbs 1.00 Pause printing on the specified printer 2010-07-11 Use ResumePrinting.vbs to resume printing again. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PhysMem.vbs 1.01 Display a physical memory summary 2002-11-10 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PingSite.vbs 1.01 Check if a web site is up and running 2007-06-21 See the Check Websites page in the VBScript Scripting Techniques section. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PingU.vbs 1.00 Notifies when a computer gets on-line 2006-01-03 CheckEngine subroutine by James Lim. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Print.vbs 1.00 Print any file 2008-01-20 Uses the file's associated print command from the registry. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Print2.vbs 1.00 Temporarily swap the default printer to allow programs without "PrintTo" support to print to a non-default printer 2008-12-05 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PrintDoc.vbs 1.00 Print the specified MS Word document to the default printer 2008-06-09 Requires Microsoft Word. Based on a script by Arnout van der Vorst. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Printing.vbs 2.20 List printer status and number of printjobs, pause or resume printing, or flush all printjobs on the selected printer(s) 2010-09-15 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PrintPDF.vbs 1.00 Print the specified PDF files 2003-03-30 Requires Adobe Reader. Based on a script written by Charles Hicks, and published on the PlanetPDF Developers Forum. The updated script by Charles Hicks will close Acrobat Reader afterwards, unless it was active already. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Processes.vbs 1.00 Display running processes 2002-10-17 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ProdID.vbs 1.01 Display Windows' product ID 2002-11-30 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ProgIDs.vbs 1.00 Display all available ProgIDs 2007-03-15 Based on a PowerShell script on www.readify.net Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PromptDemo.hta 1.00 Demonstration of Prompt, Confirm and Alert dialogs in HTAs 2013-10-15 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PWGen.vbs 1.00 Generate random complex passwords of a specified length 2008-01-02 Requires CAPICOM. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source PwdNoExp.vbs 1.00 Set "password never expires" for a local account 2007-10-01 Based on a Microsoft TechNet Script Center sample. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source QPro2Xls.vbs 1.00 Convert Quattro Pro spreadsheets to Excel 2009-09-14 Requires Quattro Pro. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source QueryCD.vbs 1.01 Display album and track names for all CDs in all drives 2007-06-14 Requires Jon F. Zahornacky and Peter Schmiedseder's uFREEDB.ocx. To register the component use the command REGSVR32 uFREEDB.ocx Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Random.vbs 1.00 Display a random (integer) number between 1 and 100 2002-12-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Random.wsc 1.00 This WSC uses random.org to retrieve true random integers 2007-08-15 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ReadINI.vbs 1.00 Read a value from the specified INI file 2003-04-19 Batch version may fail on "special" characters like & | < > and parentheses Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ReadReg.vbs 1.00 Read a value from the registry 2003-04-06 Based on "Registry functions Provided by the WMI StdRegProv class" by Andrew Mayberry. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Reboot.vbs 2.10 Reboot any computer 2007-11-21 Based on a post by Alex K. Angelopoulos on www.developersdex.com. See my shutdown.php">Shutdown page for shutdown and reboot commands for "all" operating systems. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Recycle.vbs 1.10 Send the contents of a folder to the Recycle Bin 2008-08-10 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Reg2Scr.vbs 0.2 Read a registry key and generate KiXtart and VBScript code to recreate that registry key 2008-07-07 Works from any computer to any computer Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Reg2Vbs.vbs 1.51 Converts all .REG files in current directory to VBScript in one shot 2012-02-17 Original script by Tim Mortimer, extended by Denis St-Pierre. Make sure you read the logged comments in the resulting scripts! Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Regedit.vbs 1.00 Open Windows 2000's REGEDIT.EXE in "classic" view (root) instead of last accessed key 2002-04-16 Tip and VBScript file from the Windows Scripting Guide Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ResumePrinting.vbs 1.00 Resume printing on the specified printer 2010-07-11 Use PausePrinting.vbs to pause printing. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Revo_Ver.vbs 2.00 Read the latest available uninstaller version from Revo's website 2012-08-08 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source RFaR.vbs 1.00 Regex Find and Replace 2010-07-30 Can be used to replace text in ASCII files or strings. Limited testing on XML files suggests UTF-8 is handled correctly as long as no Unicode characters need to be found or replaced. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source RndClass.vbs This class retrieves true random numbers from random.org 2007-08-13 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source RndComp.vbs 1.00 Demo script retrieves true random numbers from random.org using Random.wsc component 2007-08-15 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. The VBScript uses the Windows Script Component to retrieve the random integers Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Romans.hta 2.00 Convert Roman numerals to decimal vv. 2013-11-12 Also available as on-line JavaScript version Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source RunNHide.vbs 2.00 Run a command hidden 2007-10-24 Based on a similar script by Alistair Johnson; I added some basic error checking and the possibility to use multiple command line arguments. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SAVVer.vbs 1.00 Display Symantec Antivirus program and definitions version for any computer on the network 2006-06-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SecStat.vbs 2.01 Display a SecurityCenter and Windows Update status overview 2009-09-29 Requires Windows XP SP2 or later. Use to find all properties for a specific AntiVirus or Firewall product. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SelFile.vbs 1.00 Displays a "Select File" dialog and returns the selected file name 2010-05-31 Known issue: though the returned file name is correct, the returned path is not Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SendClip.vbs 1.01 Send a full path or any text string to the clipboard 2002-11-19 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Services.vbs 1.00 Display all services 2002-11-02 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ServicesTD.vbs 1.00 Display all services for any WMI enabled computer on the network in TAB delimited format 2002-11-02 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SetDate.vbs 1.10 Set today's day, month, year, week and quarter in environment variables 2009-07-25 When scheduled every midnight and at system startup, your batch files can read the day, month, year, week, quarter, weekday and day of the year directly from environment variables. This can be very useful in backup directory names, log file names, etc. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SFaR.vbs 1.00 Simple Find and Replace 2010-07-14 Can be used to replace text in ASCII files or strings. Limited testing on XML files suggests UTF-8 is handled correctly as long as no Unicode characters need to be found or replaced. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ShareMg2.vbs 2.00 Migrate all non-printer shares from one server to another 2005-11-02 Currently for Windows Server 2003, created migration script needs manual modifications afterwards for Windows 2000. (For printer migration, read the Printing section of my Unattended Installations page, for Scheduled Tasks migration, read the Scheduled Tasks section). Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Shortcut.vbs 1.00 Create, modify or delete shortcuts 2013-03-25 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ShowPRN.vbs 1.00 Display all installed printers and their properties 2004-01-13 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ShowPRNT.vbs 1.01 Display all installed printers and their properties for any WMI enabled computer on the network in TAB delimited format 2004-01-17 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Shutdown.vbs 1.10 Shutdown any WMI enabled computer on the network 2007-11-21 Based on a post by Alex K. Angelopoulos on www.developersdex.com. See my Shutdown page for shutdown and reboot commands for "all" operating systems. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SID2User.vbs 1.00 Return DOMAIN\UserID for the specified SID 2009-09-25 Based on an article by the Microsoft Scripting Guys. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SkypeVer.vbs 1.00 Display installed Skype software version 2009-09-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SnagTest.vbs 1.01 Automated SnagIt screen capture 2008-01-28 Requires SnagIt 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Software.hta 3.02 List installed software 2013-12-17 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SortDate.vbs 1.00 Display the date in YYYYMMDD format 2002-12-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SortTime.vbs 1.00 Display the time in HHmmss format 2002-12-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source SrvInv.vbs 1.21 Show and log a server hardware and software inventory 2005-09-14 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source StarDate.vbs 1.00 Convert current date & time to stardate 2003-02-03 Based on an algorithm found on The StarTrek Gallery Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Startup.vbs 1.00 Display all startup commands (Startup folder and registry Run) 2003-01-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source StringHash.vbs 1.00 Get the MD5 or SHA-256 hash value for the specified string 2010-07-30 This script uses the MD5 and SHA256 classes by Frez Systems Limited, which were adapted for use in VBScript by Michal Gabrukiewicz (MD5) and yours truly (SHA-256). Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source TimeSyncWeb.vbs 1.00 Synchronize your computer's system time with any webserver 2014-01-10 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Tomorrow.vbs 1.00 Display yesterday's, today's and tomorrow's date in several formats 2002-12-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Tomorrow.js 1.00 Display yesterday's, today's and tomorrow's date in several formats 2002-12-29 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source TrueRnd.vbs 1.00 Retrieve true random numbers generated by random.org, not a value from a stored semi-random sequence 2007-08-11 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Txt2ASCI.vbs 1.00 Convert any "plain" text file to US ASCII 2009-09-03 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Txt2Src.vbs 2.00 Convert "special" characters in a text file to HTML entities 2009-05-04 I wrote this script to convert my own scripts to HTML source code. As of version 2.00 this script supports codepage selection on the command line. Codepages 437, 850, 858 and 1252 are supported, you can add other codepages yourself. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Txt2UTF8.vbs 1.00 Convert plain ASCII files to UTF-8 2009-02-12 Requires MDAC 2.8. Based on a forum post by JTMar. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Txt2Vbs.vbs Convert .TXT files into VBScript code that can recreate the .TXT file 2008-10-23 Script by Denis St-Pierre. The .TXT file could be any text file, even another script. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source UpdateCheck.hta 1.40 Check if a newer version of the specified program is available, and if so offer to download it 2014-12-18 Requires UpdateCheck.ini and WinHTTP 5.1. Adds a GUI to UpdateCheck.vbs; the HTA and VBScript versions share the same INI file. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UpdateCheck.ini 1.40 Helper file for UpdateCheck.hta and/or UpdateCheck.vbs 2014-12-18 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UpdateCheck.vbs 1.08 Check if a newer version of the specified program is available, and if so open its download URL 2013-07-17 Requires UpdateCheck.ini and WinHTTP 5.1. Replaces UpdateVueScan.vbs and UpdateDPP.vbs; modify the INI file to add update checks for other programs.
Discontinued, use the HTA instead. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UpdateDPP.vbs 1.01 Check if a newer version of Canon's Digital Photo Professional (DPP) is available, and if so open its download URL 2013-02-18 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UpTime.vbs 1.00 Display server uptime 2006-04-22 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source User2SID.vbs 1.00 Return the SID for the specified user ID 2009-09-25 Based on an article by the Microsoft Scripting Guys. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UTC2Date.vbs 1.00 Convert Unix time (UTC) to the current user's default date/time format 2011-03-18 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source UTC2ISO.vbs 1.01 Convert Unix time (UTC) to ISO date and/or time 2011-03-16 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VBS2CMD.vbs 1.02 "Convert" VBScript to batch file 2014-08-07 Actually more a "packager": the script wraps a VBScript file into a single self-contained batch script that recreates the original VBScript and then runs it. Written by Denis St-Pierre, adapted for non-XP Windows versions by Rob van der Woude. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VBSEdVer.vbs 1.01 Read the latest available version of VBSEdit from its download page 2012-08-19 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VBSNames.vbs 3.00 Demonstrates several VBScript techniques to retrieve user names, computer names & domain names 2007-01-22 Demo script from my VBScript scripting techniques section. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VerSkype.vbs 1.00 Display latest available Skype software version 2009-09-16 Requires WinHTTP 5.1. Hardcoded to read the Skype version from the title of its download page; may break if Skype changes its download page setup Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VideoROM.vbs 1.00 Display video adapter summary 2002-12-01 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source VMList.vbs 1.00 List all Virtual Machines and their associated files on the local Virtual Server Host 2006-04-22 Requires Microsoft Virtual Server 2005. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Wallpaper.vbs 1.01 Change the Desktop's wallpaper 2008-08-13 Lots of command line switches, use /? to list all options. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WANIP.vbs 2.00 Get your WAN IP address 2009-01-29 Requires XMLHTTP. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Week.vbs 2.00 Calculate the ISO week number for any date 2011-02-10 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WGet.vbs 1.01 Display or save a web page 2011-01-06 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WGetTxt.vbs 2.00 Display or save a web page without the HTML formating 2010-12-31 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Which.vbs 1.20 Find out which file is executed when you type a command 2014-07-24 The VBScript version also checks for internal commands, thus emulating the behaviour of the command interpreter Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WhoIs.vbs 3.00 Display the WHOIS database entry for the specified domain in the default browser 2003-01-12 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WhoIs.wsc 1.01 WSC to query WHOIS for domain registration information 2007-06-14 See the Whois WSC section for more details. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WhoIsCls.vbs 1.01 Class to query WHOIS for domain registration information 2007-05-05 This script demonstrates and includes my WhoIs class, which is much more flexible than my previous WhoIs scripts. See the Whois Class section for more details. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WhoIsCom.vbs 1.00 Query WHOIS for domain registration information (demo for WhoIs.wsc) 2007-06-14 This script demonstrates my WhoIs.wsc component, which is much more flexible than my previous WhoIs scripts. See the Whois WSC section for more details. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WinInVer.vbs 1.01 Display the currently installed Windows Installer version, and optionally check if it meets a required minimum version 2008-05-08 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WinVer.vbs 1.11 Display the Windows version 2005-07-26 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source WMIGen.hta 9.02 Generate Batch, C#, Delphi, F#, Java, JScript, KiXtart, Lua, Object Pascal, Object Rexx, Perl, PowerShell, Python, Ruby, VB .NET and VBScript code for WMI queries 2014-08-20 Based on the example from the Microsoft TechNet ScriptCenter article Scripting Eye for the GUI Guy, with help from the Scripting Guys' Scriptomatic 2.0 and HTA Helpomatic tools and The Script Center Script Repository: Sample Windows PowerShell Scripts. C# code generation with assistance of Bas van der Woude. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Word2PDF.vbs 1.00 Convert Word documents to PDF 2007-04-07 Requires Microsoft Word 2007 and Microsoft Save as PDF or XPS Add-in for 2007 Microsoft Office. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Word2RTF.vbs 1.00 Convert Word documents to RTF 2007-04-07 Requires Microsoft Word. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Word2XPS.vbs 1.00 Convert Word documents to XPS 2007-04-07 Requires Microsoft Word 2007 and Microsoft Save as PDF or XPS Add-in for 2007 Microsoft Office. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WP2PDF.vbs 1.00 Convert WP documents to PDF 2007-03-10 Requires Corel WordPerfect Office. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WPSaveAs.vbs 1.00 Convert WP documents to HTML or any other supported format 2007-02-12 Requires Corel WordPerfect Office. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WSaveAs.vbs 2.00 Convert Word documents to HTML 2011-12-12 Requires Microsoft Word. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WUpdHist.vbs 1.00 List or query the Windows Update history 2008-01-01 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source WSHVer.vbs 1.10 Display the WSH version number, or part of it, and optionally compare it against a required minimum version 2011-08-15 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source XHTTPDmo.vbs 1.00 Script to demonstrate file downloads with X-HTTP 2007-03-19 Requires X-HTTP component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source XL2CSV.vbs 1.00 Convert Excel sheet to CSV 2009-01-08 Requires Excel. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source XL2XML.vbs 1.10 Convert Excel sheet to XML 2010-02-26 Requires Microsoft XMLDOM. Does not require Excel. Obsolete, superseded by Excel2XML.vbs Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source XMD5Demo.vbs 1.00 Script to demonstrate using X-MD5 to calculate MD5 checksums 2007-03-19 Requires X-MD5 component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source XZipDemo.vbs 1.00 Script to demonstrate using X-ZIP to create or extract ZIP files 2007-03-19 Requires X-ZIP component. Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source YahooFX.vbs 1.00 Command line currency conversion 2007-07-02 Uses Yahoo! Finance's Currency Converter Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source Yesterday.vbs 1.01 Display today's and yesterday's date in several formats 2002-04-01 Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source YFXClass.vbs 1.00 Extended command line currency conversion demo using a class 2007-07-03 Uses Yahoo! Finance's Currency Converter Click the floppy disk icon to dowload the ZIPed source Click the question mark icon to view the MD5 and SHA1 checksums for the ZIPed source ZipDirXP.vbs 1.00 Recursively ZIP an entire folder 2008-10-12 Based on a VBA script by Ron de Bruin |
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RenatoBos
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