My Take on the “First WordPress Quality Analysis Report”

I fueled up on coffee and dove into the Test Team’s first ever Quality Analysis Report. They spent six months planning, three months collecting data, and reviewed 217 commits from the 6.8 release through 6.8.2. Of those, 52 were tagged as “improvements” (bug fixes, enhancements, regressions) and each got a 0–5 score based on code reviews, manual tests, and automated tests.

Me to my coffee mug – “Ready to tame this beast?”
Coffee mug – “Only if you refill me by commit 100”

Spotlight on My Contributions

Over the reporting period, I submitted 13 detailed test reports so far, which landed me firmly in the top dozen contributors out of 58 testers. It was a real thrill to see my efforts recognized, knowing that each report I crafted helped give the Test Team clearer insights into where Core needed attention.

Hunting down those tricky edge cases and squashing stubborn bugs wasn’t just a fun challenge, it drove actual fixes in WordPress. There’s something deeply satisfying about spotting your name in the official report and realizing that your work directly improved the platform millions rely on every day.

Slack moment – I couldn’t resist dropping “Top tester alert: eyes on me” into #core-test

Quick Stats That Made Me Nod

  • Media component led the pack with a 3.29 average score over 7 commits
  • Editor followed at 2.75 over 4 commits
  • Build & Test Tools landed at 2.4 over 5 commits
  • Almost 60 percent of merged changes had no manual tests, like shipping cupcakes without tasting them first

Why This Matters and What’s Next

This report isn’t about blame. It’s a roadmap for tighter teamwork, bringing testing insights into Core development earlier. I’ll be watching for Test Team calls to action and hope you’ll join me in writing tests that make WordPress stronger.


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