What Integrates with QA Touch?

Find out what QA Touch integrations exist in 2025. Learn what software and services currently integrate with QA Touch, and sort them by reviews, cost, features, and more. Below is a list of products that QA Touch currently integrates with:

  • 1
    Selenium Reviews

    Selenium

    Software Freedom Conservancy

    2 Ratings
    Selenium automates browsers. That's all there is to it! It's up to you what you do with this power. It is primarily used to automate web applications for testing purposes. However, it is not limited to that. Boring web-based administration tasks are also possible (and should) be automated. Selenium WebDriver is a collection language-specific bindings that allows you to drive a browser the way it was intended to be driven. It will allow you to create robust browser-based regression automation suites, tests, scale, and distribute scripts across multiple environments. Selenium WebDriver is a Chrome and Firefox addon that allows you to quickly create bug reproduction scripts or scripts to assist in automated exploratory testing. It will record and playback all interactions with the browser. You can scale by running tests on multiple machines and managing multiple environments from one central point.
  • 2
    Jira Service Management Reviews

    Jira Service Management

    Atlassian

    $20 per user per month
    6 Ratings
    Jira Service Management (formerly Jira Service Desk), empowers Dev/Ops teams to work at high-velocity to respond to business changes quickly and provide great customer and employee service experiences. Tune Jira Service Management for your specific needs. Every team member, from IT to legal to HR, can set up a service desk quickly, and then adapt to scale. Provide great service experiences quickly - without the complexity and cost of traditional ITSM solutions. An open, collaborative platform allows you to track work across your enterprise. You can link issues across Jira, as well as ingest data from other software-development tools, to give your IT support and operations teams richer contextual information that allows them to quickly respond to incidents, requests, and changes. Manage risk and deliver more customer impact. You can accelerate critical development work, eliminate the need for manual labor, and deploy changes quickly with an audit trail for each change.
  • 3
    monday.com Reviews
    Top Pick

    monday.com

    monday.com

    $39/month for 5 users
    96 Ratings
    monday.com Work OS is a no-code work management platform that helps teams manage projects and workflows more efficiently. This software provides fully customizable solutions for a wide range of use-cases such as marketing, sales, operations, IT, HR, and many more. With monday.com you can easily plan, manage, and track every project in one place, with the help of time-saving and easy-to-use features such as automations, time tracking, document sharing, real-time collaboration, and more. Multiple visual board views such as Gantt, Kanban, and Cards help you prioritize, structure, and navigate tasks and projects the way that suits you and your team’s needs, while dashboards give a high-level overview of your progress and help you make data-driven decisions. In addition, integrations with apps such as Outlook, Microsoft Teams, Gmail, and Excel, allow you to easily continue working with your favorite tools directly within the platform. monday.com also offers dedicated solutions, such as monday dev and monday sales CRM, designed to answer the needs of specific industries.
  • 4
    Slack Reviews
    Top Pick

    Slack

    Slack

    $6.67 per user per month
    247 Ratings
    Slack, a cloud-based project collaboration software solution that facilitates communication between teams, is designed to seamlessly integrate with other organizations. Slack offers powerful tools and services all integrated into one platform. It provides private channels for interaction within smaller teams, direct channels for sending messages to colleagues, as well as public channels that allow members to start conversations across organizations. Slack is available on Mac, Windows and Android as well as iOS apps. It offers a variety of features including chat, file sharing and collaboration, real-time notifications and two-way audio/video, screen sharing, document imaging and activity tracking and logging.
  • 5
    Redmine Reviews
    Redmine is a web-based project management tool. It is built using Ruby on Rails and is cross-platform as well as cross-database. Redmine is open-source and released under the terms GNU General Public License (v2) (GPL). Redmine's main features include: - Multiple projects support - Flexible role-based access control Flexible issue tracking system Gantt chart, calendar - News, documents & files management - Email notifications and feeds - Per project Wiki - Per project forums Time tracking - Custom fields to allow for time-entries, projects, and users - SCM Integration (SVN, CVS. Git, Mercurial and Bazaar). - Issue creation via email - Multiple LDAP authentication support - User self-registration support - Multilanguage support - Multiple databases support
  • 6
    Cypress Reviews

    Cypress

    Cypress.io

    Free
    End-to-end testing of any web-based application is fast, simple and reliable.
  • 7
    Playwright Reviews
    Playwright supports all modern rendering engines, including Chromium and WebKit. You can test on Windows, Linux, or macOS. Playwright waits for the elements to become actionable before he can take any actions. It also offers a wealth of introspection events. Combining the two reduces artificial timeouts, which is the main cause of flaky tests. Playwright assertions were created for the dynamic web. Checks are automatically retried until all conditions are met. To eliminate flaky bits, configure test retry strategy, capture execution trace and screenshots. Browsers can run web content from different origins in different ways. Playwright is compatible with modern browser architectures and runs tests out of-process. Playwright is free from the limitations of in-process test runners.
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next