- From: Robin Berjon <robin@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 16:52:52 +0200
- To: "HTML WG (public-html@w3.org)" <public-html@w3.org>
On 31/03/2014 14:21 , Robin Berjon wrote: > • Of the 16% of subtests that don't have two passes, a whooping 15 > percentage points (that is, 93% of all failures) come from Range tests. > While it is no secret that Range isn't the most interoperable part of > the Web platform, that seems high. > > • What's more, of the previous 15 percentage points, about 13 are > tests returning "undefined" for IE due to test timeouts. I find this > unlikely. It could be an artefact of my IE test being run on an old, > relatively unpowered Surface. I don't know how many passes IE would add > here, but I'm investigating trying to get a new batch of results without > the timeouts at least. I have now managed to get a better IE test run (though not yet perfect, still lots of timeouts). Just with that, the number of failures has dropped by 800, to ~14% of total. -- Robin Berjon - http://berjon.com/ - @robinberjon
Received on Monday, 31 March 2014 14:53:04 UTC