published: true description: "A developer's honest review of TestSprite: the autonomous AI testing agent that generates, runs, and patches tests for you. Including locale handling observations." tags: testing, ai, webdev, devtools cover_image: https://storage.googleapis.com/runable-templates/cli-uploads%2FgcLrVl9Cg6BLWTHb6clQeDzRFGBCNd4h%2F1kCxrovt5t9apSMJWdkFB%2Ftestsprite_hero.png I've been buil
I've been skeptical of AI-powered testing tools for a while. Most of them are glorified code generators that spit out flaky Playwright tests and call it a day. So when I heard about TestSprite — which promises to write, run, and maintain tests through an MCP integration — I decided to actually put it to work on a real project before writing a single word about it. The project: a mid-size e-commerc
You have probably seen a file named “go.sum” in almost every Go project you have worked on. You may have even seen it change every time you run “go mod tidy”. But do you actually know what it does? It is one of those files that works silently in the background, and some developers never stop to think about it. The “go.sum” file is one of those files you never really interact with directly, but it