Hello, I’m working on the Agentforce Specialist certification and using practice scenarios to figure out how the platform behaves in different environments. While going through the Salesforce Agentforce Specialist exam questions, I’ve noticed some UI behaviors that vary depending on the browser or OS, which has made answering a few questions a bit confusing.
This got me thinking, has anyone here encountered compatibility issues or inconsistencies when testing Salesforce Agentforce Specialist features using LambdaTest or other cross-browser testing tools?
Would really appreciate any insights, best practices, or specific things to watch out for during testing. Thanks in advance!
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Hey @jhonm5288
Yes, browser/OS inconsistencies can definitely affect how certain Salesforce components behave, especially in the Agentforce UI. This is something we’ve also noticed when testing Agentforce Specialist scenarios.
We’ve used LambdaTest extensively for cross-browser testing, and it’s been useful in pinpointing layout shifts, dropdown issues, and occasional script behavior that only shows up in specific environments (e.g., Safari on macOS vs. Chrome on Windows).
A few tips that helped us:
Always test in both Chromium-based and non-Chromium browsers (like Firefox and Safari) to catch rendering edge cases.
Pay attention to pop-ups/modals, Agentforce sometimes behaves differently with them in Firefox.
Mobile responsiveness isn’t always a focus in the certification test, but it’s good to simulate a few common mobile resolutions.
Watch for Lightning component rendering quirks, which can behave slightly off on older browser versions.
Using the geolocation and network throttling features in LambdaTest also helped us simulate real-world agent environments better.
If you need any support, feel free to reach out to support@lambdatest.com.
Hi @jhonm5288, I’ve actually noticed the same thing while prepping for the Agentforce Specialist cert. When I tested some of the scenarios on different browsers using LambdaTest, there were small differences like modals opening slower or dropdowns not aligning the same way on Firefox vs. Chrome.
Nothing was totally broken, but enough to throw you off if you’re trying to answer Salesforce Agentforce Specialist exam questions based on how things “should” look or behave.
I’d suggest sticking with Chrome or whatever Salesforce officially supports, and maybe using LambdaTest to double-check any weird behavior you’re seeing. It helped me catch a few things I thought were bugs but turned out to just be browser quirks.
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