These pages help you in helping us. Because UmlCanvas is mainly a visual experience and not all browsers are there yet that we can completely automate our tests, we need your help. It takes less that a minute to complete about 3 steps to provide us with anonymous information about your browser and how it renders a reference UmlCanvas diagram.
Please take the time to validate the information we detected from your browser below, take a screenshot and upload it along with the information in the form. That's all it takes.
This information helps us improving support of UmlCanvas on more browsers and especially more versions of browsers. If your browser is already in our database, please verify that the image we have matches what you see. If not, do submit your information with a screenshot, so we can validate this result.
Thanks a lot!
The UmlCanvas Team
Great news, you can be the first to submit a test report for your browser on your operating system. Please take a minute to follow the steps below to improve our coverage for this release of UmlCanvas.
Step 1: Open the test page in a pop-up window
Warning/Disclaimer
We know it's evil, but if you click the link below to the actual test, a window will popup and resize to about 800 by 400 pixels. It's preparing your browser for its close-up. This way all our screenshots will look more or less the same and will easier to handle.
... on Windows all you have to do is make the window active, by clicking on it and then hit alt + prtscn. That puts the image into your clipboard, from where you can cut and paste it where you like. Open for example Paint, paste the sceenshot onto it, save and you're ready to upload it to us. Please save as PNG.
... on Mac OS X, you hit cmd + $. This changes your cursor to a crosshair, allowing you to select a portion of the screen. With the space bar you now can toggle between this mode and a mode that captures one single window. Click on the browser window to take a screenshot and have it saved directly to your desktop. By default this should be in a PNG format. So you're set to go.
... on Linux, you have many options and these options depend a bit on which distribution you use. Google might be a good option to help you out if you don't know how to take a screenshot of one window yet.
A good option is to go for Gimp. Steps to perform: File menu → Create → screendump.
... on ... on ... we're sorry to admit, but we couldn't detect your operating system, so we can't really give you any advise on how to take screenshots.
(we detected your OS automagically. If we did a bad job, you'll have to rely on your own or Google's knowledge to find instructions to take a screenshot of one window)
Step 3: Validate the form, add the screenshot and submit