Acceptance criteria vs. Functional requirements by Anna Dąbrowska
1. Who?
2. What?
3. Why?
User stories
Never go into development without the story or narrative having:• priority• story or narrative (depending on complexity)• acceptance criteria• knowing what the end to end test scenario is /are• sign off from the customer for all of the above• an estimate from iteration based on all of the above
What are Acceptance Criteria?
Acceptance Criteria are a set of statements, each with a clear pass/fail result, that can be measured and specify both functional and non-functional requirements.
Acceptance Criteria are the conditions that a software product must satisfy to be accepted by a user, customer, or in the case of system level functionality, the consuming system.
Why to write?
• Define the boundaries for a user story/feature
• Help the product owner answer what she needs in order for this feature to provide value (typically these are the minimum functional requirements)
• Help the team gain a shared understanding of the story/feature (BEFORE development has started)
• Help developers and testers to derive tests
• Help developers know when to stop adding more functionality to a story
*Icons are created by Nathanael Coyne (@nathanaelb).
How to write?
Good acceptance criteria:
• State an intent not a solution (e.g. “The user can choose an account” rather than “The user can select the account from a drop-down”)
• Are independent of implementation
• Are relatively high level (not every detail needs to be in writing)
• Are SMART
• Have observable result
• Include actor/actions/environment/conditions/context
• Are written from user perspective
How not to write?
Watch out for
• Ambiguous language
• Subjective/Judgemental language (Better, Good, Allowable)
• Generalisations (All the time, Never, Everyone, Always)
• Observed behaviour that is not directly related to the story currently under consideration
Methods to write
1. Scenario style approach• Happy Path • Alternative Path • Bad Path
2. BDD style acceptance criteria• Given <a condition>• When <an event occurs>• Then <expect this outcome>
When to write?
! Avoid is writing acceptance criteria after development has started
WHAT is expected,
and not HOW the functionality will be implemented.
What. Not How
Functional requirements Acceptance criteria Requirements are what you're supposed to do in terms of given story.
Acceptance Criteria are the agreed upon measures to prove you've done.
Acceptance Criteria are defined as conditions that a User Story must satisfy to be accepted by a user, customer or other stakeholder.
Example. Try to write
Functional requirements1. Site language corresponds to chosen one2. Language can be changed3. Default language icon appears in top right corner4. English is a default language5. Dropdown with list of languages appears by clicking on language
flag in right top corner6. User can select language by clicking on corresponding one in drop-
down menu7. Site content changes to selected language after user has clicked on
its name/icon in switching drop-down8. List of languages and translations are grabbed from admin panel
As a user I want to switch application language so that I understand app content
Example. Try to write
1. User can change site language2. Site content corresponds to selected language3.Translation is correct and doesn’t contain critical mistakes4. Translated content doesn't break any specific layout5. No bugs of high and normal priority related to switching languages remain open
Acceptance criteria
As a user I want to switch application language so that I understand app content
Questions?