Learn to say popular load and performance testing tool names correctly.
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How is k6 (open-source load testing tool for developers) correctly pronounced?
k6 is pronounced 'KAY-siks' — the letter 'K' plus the number 'six'. In a technical interview: "k6 scripted the load test in JavaScript, so the QA team could read it too."
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How is Locust (Python-based distributed load testing tool) correctly pronounced?
Locust is pronounced 'LOH-kust' — exactly like the everyday word for the swarming insect, stress on LOH. In a technical interview: "Locust simulated ten thousand concurrent users hitting the checkout endpoint."
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How is Gatling (Scala-based high-performance load testing framework) correctly pronounced?
Gatling is pronounced 'GAT-ling' — like the rapid-fire 'Gatling gun', stress on GAT. In a technical interview: "Gatling's HTML report showed exactly where response times started climbing."
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How is Artillery (Node.js load testing and performance toolkit) correctly pronounced?
Artillery is pronounced 'ahr-TIL-uh-ree' — exactly like the everyday military term, stress on TIL. In a technical interview: "Artillery ramped up virtual users gradually so we could watch the API degrade in real time."
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How is JMeter (Apache's Java-based load and performance testing tool) correctly pronounced?
JMeter is pronounced 'JAY-mee-ter' — 'J' spoken as a letter plus 'meter'. Stress on JAY. In a technical interview: "JMeter's thread groups let us model three different user journeys in one test plan."