Module: Selenium::Client::GeneratedDriver
- Included in:
- Base
- Defined in:
- lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#add_location_strategy(strategyName, functionDefinition) ⇒ Object
Defines a new function for Selenium to locate elements on the page.
-
#add_script(scriptContent, scriptTagId) ⇒ Object
Loads script content into a new script tag in the Selenium document.
-
#add_selection(locator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Add a selection to the set of selected options in a multi-select element using an option locator.
-
#allow_native_xpath(allow) ⇒ Object
Specifies whether Selenium should use the native in-browser implementation of XPath (if any native version is available); if you pass “false” to this function, we will always use our pure-JavaScript xpath library.
-
#alt_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the alt key and hold it down until doAltUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
-
#alt_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the alt key.
-
#answer_on_next_prompt(answer) ⇒ Object
Instructs Selenium to return the specified answer string in response to the next JavaScript prompt [window.prompt()].
-
#assign_id(locator, identifier) ⇒ Object
Temporarily sets the “id” attribute of the specified element, so you can locate it in the future using its ID rather than a slow/complicated XPath.
-
#attach_file(fieldLocator, fileLocator) ⇒ Object
Sets a file input (upload) field to the file listed in fileLocator.
-
#capture_entire_page_screenshot(filename, kwargs) ⇒ Object
Saves the entire contents of the current window canvas to a PNG file.
-
#capture_entire_page_screenshot_to_string(kwargs) ⇒ Object
Downloads a screenshot of the browser current window canvas to a based 64 encoded PNG file.
-
#capture_screenshot(filename) ⇒ Object
Captures a PNG screenshot to the specified file.
-
#capture_screenshot_to_string ⇒ Object
Capture a PNG screenshot.
-
#check(locator) ⇒ Object
Check a toggle-button (checkbox/radio).
-
#choose_cancel_on_next_confirmation ⇒ Object
By default, Selenium’s overridden window.confirm() function will return true, as if the user had manually clicked OK; after running this command, the next call to confirm() will return false, as if the user had clicked Cancel.
-
#choose_ok_on_next_confirmation ⇒ Object
Undo the effect of calling chooseCancelOnNextConfirmation.
-
#click(locator) ⇒ Object
Clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button.
-
#click_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button.
-
#close ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “close” button in the titlebar of a popup window or tab.
-
#context_menu(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates opening the context menu for the specified element (as might happen if the user “right-clicked” on the element).
-
#context_menu_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates opening the context menu for the specified element (as might happen if the user “right-clicked” on the element).
-
#control_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the control key and hold it down until doControlUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
-
#control_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the control key.
-
#create_cookie(nameValuePair, optionsString) ⇒ Object
Create a new cookie whose path and domain are same with those of current page under test, unless you specified a path for this cookie explicitly.
-
#delete_all_visible_cookies ⇒ Object
Calls deleteCookie with recurse=true on all cookies visible to the current page.
-
#delete_cookie(name, optionsString) ⇒ Object
Delete a named cookie with specified path and domain.
-
#deselect_pop_up ⇒ Object
Selects the main window.
-
#double_click(locator) ⇒ Object
Double clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button.
-
#double_click_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Doubleclicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button.
-
#drag_and_drop(locator, movementsString) ⇒ Object
Drags an element a certain distance and then drops it.
-
#drag_and_drop_to_object(locatorOfObjectToBeDragged, locatorOfDragDestinationObject) ⇒ Object
Drags an element and drops it on another element.
-
#dragdrop(locator, movementsString) ⇒ Object
deprecated - use dragAndDrop instead.
-
#fire_event(locator, eventName) ⇒ Object
Explicitly simulate an event, to trigger the corresponding “onevent” handler.
-
#focus(locator) ⇒ Object
Move the focus to the specified element; for example, if the element is an input field, move the cursor to that field.
-
#get_alert ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript alert generated during the previous action, or fail if there were no alerts.
-
#get_all_buttons ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all buttons on the page.
-
#get_all_fields ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all input fields on the page.
-
#get_all_links ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all links on the page.
-
#get_all_window_ids ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
-
#get_all_window_names ⇒ Object
Returns the names of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
-
#get_all_window_titles ⇒ Object
Returns the titles of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
-
#get_attribute(attributeLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets the value of an element attribute.
-
#get_attribute_from_all_windows(attributeName) ⇒ Object
Returns an array of JavaScript property values from all known windows having one.
-
#get_body_text ⇒ Object
Gets the entire text of the page.
-
#get_confirmation ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript confirmation dialog generated during the previous action.
-
#get_cookie ⇒ Object
Return all cookies of the current page under test.
-
#get_cookie_by_name(name) ⇒ Object
Returns the value of the cookie with the specified name, or throws an error if the cookie is not present.
-
#get_css_count(css) ⇒ Object
Returns the number of nodes that match the specified css selector, eg.
-
#get_cursor_position(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the text cursor position in the given input element or textarea; beware, this may not work perfectly on all browsers.
-
#get_element_height(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the height of an element.
-
#get_element_index(locator) ⇒ Object
Get the relative index of an element to its parent (starting from 0).
-
#get_element_position_left(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the horizontal position of an element.
-
#get_element_position_top(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the vertical position of an element.
-
#get_element_width(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the width of an element.
-
#get_eval(script) ⇒ Object
Gets the result of evaluating the specified JavaScript snippet.
-
#get_expression(expression) ⇒ Object
Returns the specified expression.
-
#get_html_source ⇒ Object
Returns the entire HTML source between the opening and closing “html” tags.
-
#get_location ⇒ Object
Gets the absolute URL of the current page.
-
#get_mouse_speed ⇒ Object
Returns the number of pixels between “mousemove” events during dragAndDrop commands (default=10).
-
#get_prompt ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript question prompt dialog generated during the previous action.
-
#get_select_options(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option labels in the specified select drop-down.
-
#get_selected_id(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option element ID for selected option in the specified select element.
-
#get_selected_ids(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option element IDs for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
-
#get_selected_index(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option index (option number, starting at 0) for selected option in the specified select element.
-
#get_selected_indexes(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option indexes (option number, starting at 0) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
-
#get_selected_label(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option label (visible text) for selected option in the specified select element.
-
#get_selected_labels(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option labels (visible text) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
-
#get_selected_value(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option value (value attribute) for selected option in the specified select element.
-
#get_selected_values(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option values (value attributes) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
-
#get_speed ⇒ Object
Get execution speed (i.e., get the millisecond length of the delay following each selenium operation).
-
#get_table(tableCellAddress) ⇒ Object
Gets the text from a cell of a table.
-
#get_text(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets the text of an element.
-
#get_title ⇒ Object
Gets the title of the current page.
-
#get_value(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets the (whitespace-trimmed) value of an input field (or anything else with a value parameter).
-
#get_whether_this_frame_match_frame_expression(currentFrameString, target) ⇒ Object
Determine whether current/locator identify the frame containing this running code.
-
#get_whether_this_window_match_window_expression(currentWindowString, target) ⇒ Object
Determine whether currentWindowString plus target identify the window containing this running code.
-
#get_xpath_count(xpath) ⇒ Object
Returns the number of nodes that match the specified xpath, eg.
-
#go_back ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “back” button on their browser.
-
#highlight(locator) ⇒ Object
Briefly changes the backgroundColor of the specified element yellow.
-
#ignore_attributes_without_value(ignore) ⇒ Object
Specifies whether Selenium will ignore xpath attributes that have no value, i.e.
-
#is_alert_present ⇒ Object
Has an alert occurred?.
-
#is_checked(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets whether a toggle-button (checkbox/radio) is checked.
-
#is_confirmation_present ⇒ Object
Has confirm() been called?.
-
#is_cookie_present(name) ⇒ Object
Returns true if a cookie with the specified name is present, or false otherwise.
-
#is_editable(locator) ⇒ Object
Determines whether the specified input element is editable, ie hasn’t been disabled.
-
#is_element_present(locator) ⇒ Object
Verifies that the specified element is somewhere on the page.
-
#is_ordered(locator1, locator2) ⇒ Object
Check if these two elements have same parent and are ordered siblings in the DOM.
-
#is_prompt_present ⇒ Object
Has a prompt occurred?.
-
#is_something_selected(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Determines whether some option in a drop-down menu is selected.
-
#is_text_present(pattern) ⇒ Object
Verifies that the specified text pattern appears somewhere on the rendered page shown to the user.
-
#is_visible(locator) ⇒ Object
Determines if the specified element is visible.
-
#key_down(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing a key (without releasing it yet).
-
#key_down_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing a key (without releasing it yet) by sending a native operating system keystroke.
-
#key_press(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing and releasing a key.
-
#key_press_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing and releasing a key by sending a native operating system keystroke.
-
#key_up(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user releasing a key.
-
#key_up_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user releasing a key by sending a native operating system keystroke.
-
#meta_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the meta key and hold it down until doMetaUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
-
#meta_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the meta key.
-
#mouse_down(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the left mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_down_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the left mouse button (without releasing it yet) at the specified location.
-
#mouse_down_right(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the right mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_down_right_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the right mouse button (without releasing it yet) at the specified location.
-
#mouse_move(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_move_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_out(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user moving the mouse pointer away from the specified element.
-
#mouse_over(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user hovering a mouse over the specified element.
-
#mouse_up(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_up_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) at the specified location.
-
#mouse_up_right(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the right mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) on the specified element.
-
#mouse_up_right_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the right mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) at the specified location.
-
#open(url) ⇒ Object
Opens an URL in the test frame.
-
#open_window(url, windowID) ⇒ Object
Opens a popup window (if a window with that ID isn’t already open).
-
#refresh ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “Refresh” button on their browser.
-
#remove_all_selections(locator) ⇒ Object
Unselects all of the selected options in a multi-select element.
-
#remove_script(scriptTagId) ⇒ Object
Removes a script tag from the Selenium document identified by the given id.
-
#remove_selection(locator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Remove a selection from the set of selected options in a multi-select element using an option locator.
-
#retrieve_last_remote_control_logs ⇒ Object
Retrieve the last messages logged on a specific remote control.
-
#rollup(rollupName, kwargs) ⇒ Object
Executes a command rollup, which is a series of commands with a unique name, and optionally arguments that control the generation of the set of commands.
-
#run_script(script) ⇒ Object
Creates a new “script” tag in the body of the current test window, and adds the specified text into the body of the command.
-
#select(selectLocator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Select an option from a drop-down using an option locator.
-
#select_frame(locator) ⇒ Object
Selects a frame within the current window.
-
#select_pop_up(windowID) ⇒ Object
Simplifies the process of selecting a popup window (and does not offer functionality beyond what
selectWindow()
already provides). -
#select_window(windowID) ⇒ Object
Selects a popup window using a window locator; once a popup window has been selected, all commands go to that window.
-
#set_browser_log_level(logLevel) ⇒ Object
Sets the threshold for browser-side logging messages; log messages beneath this threshold will be discarded.
-
#set_context(context) ⇒ Object
Writes a message to the status bar and adds a note to the browser-side log.
-
#set_cursor_position(locator, position) ⇒ Object
Moves the text cursor to the specified position in the given input element or textarea.
-
#set_mouse_speed(pixels) ⇒ Object
Configure the number of pixels between “mousemove” events during dragAndDrop commands (default=10).
-
#set_speed(value) ⇒ Object
Set execution speed (i.e., set the millisecond length of a delay which will follow each selenium operation).
-
#set_timeout(timeout) ⇒ Object
Specifies the amount of time that Selenium will wait for actions to complete.
-
#shift_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the shift key and hold it down until doShiftUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
-
#shift_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the shift key.
-
#shut_down_selenium_server ⇒ Object
Kills the running Selenium Server and all browser sessions.
-
#submit(formLocator) ⇒ Object
Submit the specified form.
-
#type(locator, value) ⇒ Object
Sets the value of an input field, as though you typed it in.
-
#type_keys(locator, value) ⇒ Object
Simulates keystroke events on the specified element, as though you typed the value key-by-key.
-
#uncheck(locator) ⇒ Object
Uncheck a toggle-button (checkbox/radio).
-
#use_xpath_library(libraryName) ⇒ Object
Allows choice of one of the available libraries.
-
#wait_for_condition(script, timeout) ⇒ Object
Runs the specified JavaScript snippet repeatedly until it evaluates to “true”.
-
#wait_for_frame_to_load(frameAddress, timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a new frame to load.
-
#wait_for_page_to_load(timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a new page to load.
-
#wait_for_pop_up(windowID, timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a popup window to appear and load up.
-
#window_focus ⇒ Object
Gives focus to the currently selected window.
-
#window_maximize ⇒ Object
Resize currently selected window to take up the entire screen.
Instance Method Details
#add_location_strategy(strategyName, functionDefinition) ⇒ Object
Defines a new function for Selenium to locate elements on the page. For example, if you define the strategy “foo”, and someone runs click(“foo=blah”), we’ll run your function, passing you the string “blah”, and click on the element that your function returns, or throw an “Element not found” error if your function returns null.
We’ll pass three arguments to your function:
-
locator: the string the user passed in
-
inWindow: the currently selected window
-
inDocument: the currently selected document
The function must return null if the element can’t be found.
‘strategyName’ is the name of the strategy to define; this should use only letters [a-zA-Z] with no spaces or other punctuation. ‘functionDefinition’ is a string defining the body of a function in JavaScript. For example: return inDocument.getElementById(locator);
1548 1549 1550 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1548 def add_location_strategy(strategyName,functionDefinition) remote_control_command("addLocationStrategy", [strategyName,functionDefinition,]) end |
#add_script(scriptContent, scriptTagId) ⇒ Object
Loads script content into a new script tag in the Selenium document. This differs from the runScript command in that runScript adds the script tag to the document of the AUT, not the Selenium document. The following entities in the script content are replaced by the characters they represent:
<
>
&
The corresponding remove command is removeScript.
‘scriptContent’ is the Javascript content of the script to add ‘scriptTagId’ is (optional) the id of the new script tag. If specified, and an element with this id already exists, this operation will fail.
1596 1597 1598 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1596 def add_script(scriptContent,scriptTagId) remote_control_command("addScript", [scriptContent,scriptTagId,]) end |
#add_selection(locator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Add a selection to the set of selected options in a multi-select element using an option locator.
‘locator’ is an element locator identifying a multi-select box ‘optionLocator’ is an option locator (a label by default)
526 527 528 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 526 def add_selection(locator,optionLocator) remote_control_command("addSelection", [locator,optionLocator,]) end |
#allow_native_xpath(allow) ⇒ Object
Specifies whether Selenium should use the native in-browser implementation of XPath (if any native version is available); if you pass “false” to this function, we will always use our pure-JavaScript xpath library. Using the pure-JS xpath library can improve the consistency of xpath element locators between different browser vendors, but the pure-JS version is much slower than the native implementations.
‘allow’ is boolean, true means we’ll prefer to use native XPath; false means we’ll only use JS XPath
1365 1366 1367 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1365 def allow_native_xpath(allow) remote_control_command("allowNativeXpath", [allow,]) end |
#alt_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the alt key and hold it down until doAltUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
255 256 257 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 255 def alt_key_down() remote_control_command("altKeyDown", []) end |
#alt_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the alt key.
262 263 264 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 262 def alt_key_up() remote_control_command("altKeyUp", []) end |
#answer_on_next_prompt(answer) ⇒ Object
Instructs Selenium to return the specified answer string in response to the next JavaScript prompt [window.prompt()].
‘answer’ is the answer to give in response to the prompt pop-up
775 776 777 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 775 def answer_on_next_prompt(answer) remote_control_command("answerOnNextPrompt", [answer,]) end |
#assign_id(locator, identifier) ⇒ Object
Temporarily sets the “id” attribute of the specified element, so you can locate it in the future using its ID rather than a slow/complicated XPath. This ID will disappear once the page is reloaded.
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element ‘identifier’ is a string to be used as the ID of the specified element
1352 1353 1354 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1352 def assign_id(locator,identifier) remote_control_command("assignId", [locator,identifier,]) end |
#attach_file(fieldLocator, fileLocator) ⇒ Object
Sets a file input (upload) field to the file listed in fileLocator
‘fieldLocator’ is an element locator ‘fileLocator’ is a URL pointing to the specified file. Before the file can be set in the input field (fieldLocator), Selenium RC may need to transfer the file to the local machine before attaching the file in a web page form. This is common in selenium grid configurations where the RC server driving the browser is not the same machine that started the test. Supported Browsers: Firefox (“*chrome”) only.
1631 1632 1633 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1631 def attach_file(fieldLocator,fileLocator) remote_control_command("attachFile", [fieldLocator,fileLocator,]) end |
#capture_entire_page_screenshot(filename, kwargs) ⇒ Object
Saves the entire contents of the current window canvas to a PNG file. Contrast this with the captureScreenshot command, which captures the contents of the OS viewport (i.e. whatever is currently being displayed on the monitor), and is implemented in the RC only. Currently this only works in Firefox when running in chrome mode, and in IE non-HTA using the EXPERIMENTAL “Snapsie” utility. The Firefox implementation is mostly borrowed from the Screengrab! Firefox extension. Please see www.screengrab.org and snapsie.sourceforge.net/ for details.
‘filename’ is the path to the file to persist the screenshot as. No filename extension will be appended by default. Directories will not be created if they do not exist, and an exception will be thrown, possibly by native code.
- ‘kwargs’ is a kwargs string that modifies the way the screenshot is captured. Example: “background=#CCFFDD” . Currently valid options: * background
-
the background CSS for the HTML document. This may be useful to set for capturing screenshots of less-than-ideal layouts, for example where absolute positioning causes the calculation of the canvas dimension to fail and a black background is exposed (possibly obscuring black text).
1565 1566 1567 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1565 def capture_entire_page_screenshot(filename,kwargs) remote_control_command("captureEntirePageScreenshot", [filename,kwargs,]) end |
#capture_entire_page_screenshot_to_string(kwargs) ⇒ Object
Downloads a screenshot of the browser current window canvas to a based 64 encoded PNG file. The entire windows canvas is captured, including parts rendered outside of the current view port.
Currently this only works in Mozilla and when running in chrome mode.
‘kwargs’ is A kwargs string that modifies the way the screenshot is captured. Example: “background=#CCFFDD”. This may be useful to set for capturing screenshots of less-than-ideal layouts, for example where absolute positioning causes the calculation of the canvas dimension to fail and a black background is exposed (possibly obscuring black text).
1658 1659 1660 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1658 def capture_entire_page_screenshot_to_string(kwargs) return string_command("captureEntirePageScreenshotToString", [kwargs,]) end |
#capture_screenshot(filename) ⇒ Object
Captures a PNG screenshot to the specified file.
‘filename’ is the absolute path to the file to be written, e.g. “c:blahscreenshot.png”
1639 1640 1641 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1639 def capture_screenshot(filename) remote_control_command("captureScreenshot", [filename,]) end |
#capture_screenshot_to_string ⇒ Object
Capture a PNG screenshot. It then returns the file as a base 64 encoded string.
1646 1647 1648 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1646 def capture_screenshot_to_string() return string_command("captureScreenshotToString", []) end |
#check(locator) ⇒ Object
Check a toggle-button (checkbox/radio)
‘locator’ is an element locator
464 465 466 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 464 def check(locator) remote_control_command("check", [locator,]) end |
#choose_cancel_on_next_confirmation ⇒ Object
By default, Selenium’s overridden window.confirm() function will return true, as if the user had manually clicked OK; after running this command, the next call to confirm() will return false, as if the user had clicked Cancel. Selenium will then resume using the default behavior for future confirmations, automatically returning true (OK) unless/until you explicitly call this command for each confirmation.
Take note - every time a confirmation comes up, you must consume it with a corresponding getConfirmation, or else the next selenium operation will fail.
744 745 746 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 744 def choose_cancel_on_next_confirmation() remote_control_command("chooseCancelOnNextConfirmation", []) end |
#choose_ok_on_next_confirmation ⇒ Object
Undo the effect of calling chooseCancelOnNextConfirmation. Note that Selenium’s overridden window.confirm() function will normally automatically return true, as if the user had manually clicked OK, so you shouldn’t need to use this command unless for some reason you need to change your mind prior to the next confirmation. After any confirmation, Selenium will resume using the default behavior for future confirmations, automatically returning true (OK) unless/until you explicitly call chooseCancelOnNextConfirmation for each confirmation.
Take note - every time a confirmation comes up, you must consume it with a corresponding getConfirmation, or else the next selenium operation will fail.
766 767 768 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 766 def choose_ok_on_next_confirmation() remote_control_command("chooseOkOnNextConfirmation", []) end |
#click(locator) ⇒ Object
Clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button. If the click action causes a new page to load (like a link usually does), call waitForPageToLoad.
‘locator’ is an element locator
144 145 146 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 144 def click(locator) remote_control_command("click", [locator,]) end |
#click_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button. If the click action causes a new page to load (like a link usually does), call waitForPageToLoad.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
173 174 175 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 173 def click_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("clickAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#close ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “close” button in the titlebar of a popup window or tab.
797 798 799 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 797 def close() remote_control_command("close", []) end |
#context_menu(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates opening the context menu for the specified element (as might happen if the user “right-clicked” on the element).
‘locator’ is an element locator
162 163 164 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 162 def (locator) remote_control_command("contextMenu", [locator,]) end |
#context_menu_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates opening the context menu for the specified element (as might happen if the user “right-clicked” on the element).
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
193 194 195 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 193 def (locator,coordString) remote_control_command("contextMenuAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#control_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the control key and hold it down until doControlUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
269 270 271 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 269 def control_key_down() remote_control_command("controlKeyDown", []) end |
#control_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the control key.
276 277 278 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 276 def control_key_up() remote_control_command("controlKeyUp", []) end |
#create_cookie(nameValuePair, optionsString) ⇒ Object
Create a new cookie whose path and domain are same with those of current page under test, unless you specified a path for this cookie explicitly.
‘nameValuePair’ is name and value of the cookie in a format “name=value” ‘optionsString’ is options for the cookie. Currently supported options include ‘path’, ‘max_age’ and ‘domain’. the optionsString’s format is “path=/path/, max_age=60, domain=.foo.com”. The order of options are irrelevant, the unit of the value of ‘max_age’ is second. Note that specifying a domain that isn’t a subset of the current domain will usually fail.
1474 1475 1476 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1474 def (nameValuePair,) remote_control_command("createCookie", [nameValuePair,,]) end |
#delete_all_visible_cookies ⇒ Object
Calls deleteCookie with recurse=true on all cookies visible to the current page. As noted on the documentation for deleteCookie, recurse=true can be much slower than simply deleting the cookies using a known domain/path.
1501 1502 1503 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1501 def () remote_control_command("deleteAllVisibleCookies", []) end |
#delete_cookie(name, optionsString) ⇒ Object
Delete a named cookie with specified path and domain. Be careful; to delete a cookie, you need to delete it using the exact same path and domain that were used to create the cookie. If the path is wrong, or the domain is wrong, the cookie simply won’t be deleted. Also note that specifying a domain that isn’t a subset of the current domain will usually fail.
Since there’s no way to discover at runtime the original path and domain of a given cookie, we’ve added an option called ‘recurse’ to try all sub-domains of the current domain with all paths that are a subset of the current path. Beware; this option can be slow. In big-O notation, it operates in O(n*m) time, where n is the number of dots in the domain name and m is the number of slashes in the path.
‘name’ is the name of the cookie to be deleted ‘optionsString’ is options for the cookie. Currently supported options include ‘path’, ‘domain’ and ‘recurse.’ The optionsString’s format is “path=/path/, domain=.foo.com, recurse=true”. The order of options are irrelevant. Note that specifying a domain that isn’t a subset of the current domain will usually fail.
1492 1493 1494 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1492 def (name,) remote_control_command("deleteCookie", [name,,]) end |
#deselect_pop_up ⇒ Object
Selects the main window. Functionally equivalent to using selectWindow()
and specifying no value for windowID
.
666 667 668 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 666 def deselect_pop_up() remote_control_command("deselectPopUp", []) end |
#double_click(locator) ⇒ Object
Double clicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button. If the double click action causes a new page to load (like a link usually does), call waitForPageToLoad.
‘locator’ is an element locator
154 155 156 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 154 def double_click(locator) remote_control_command("doubleClick", [locator,]) end |
#double_click_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Doubleclicks on a link, button, checkbox or radio button. If the action causes a new page to load (like a link usually does), call waitForPageToLoad.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
184 185 186 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 184 def double_click_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("doubleClickAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#drag_and_drop(locator, movementsString) ⇒ Object
Drags an element a certain distance and then drops it
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘movementsString’ is offset in pixels from the current location to which the element should be moved, e.g., “+70,-300”
1185 1186 1187 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1185 def drag_and_drop(locator,movementsString) remote_control_command("dragAndDrop", [locator,movementsString,]) end |
#drag_and_drop_to_object(locatorOfObjectToBeDragged, locatorOfDragDestinationObject) ⇒ Object
Drags an element and drops it on another element
‘locatorOfObjectToBeDragged’ is an element to be dragged ‘locatorOfDragDestinationObject’ is an element whose location (i.e., whose center-most pixel) will be the point where locatorOfObjectToBeDragged is dropped
1194 1195 1196 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1194 def drag_and_drop_to_object(locatorOfObjectToBeDragged,locatorOfDragDestinationObject) remote_control_command("dragAndDropToObject", [locatorOfObjectToBeDragged,locatorOfDragDestinationObject,]) end |
#dragdrop(locator, movementsString) ⇒ Object
deprecated - use dragAndDrop instead
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘movementsString’ is offset in pixels from the current location to which the element should be moved, e.g., “+70,-300”
1155 1156 1157 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1155 def dragdrop(locator,movementsString) remote_control_command("dragdrop", [locator,movementsString,]) end |
#fire_event(locator, eventName) ⇒ Object
Explicitly simulate an event, to trigger the corresponding “onevent” handler.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘eventName’ is the event name, e.g. “focus” or “blur”
203 204 205 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 203 def fire_event(locator,eventName) remote_control_command("fireEvent", [locator,eventName,]) end |
#focus(locator) ⇒ Object
Move the focus to the specified element; for example, if the element is an input field, move the cursor to that field.
‘locator’ is an element locator
211 212 213 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 211 def focus(locator) remote_control_command("focus", [locator,]) end |
#get_alert ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript alert generated during the previous action, or fail if there were no alerts.
Getting an alert has the same effect as manually clicking OK. If an alert is generated but you do not consume it with getAlert, the next Selenium action will fail. Under Selenium, JavaScript alerts will NOT pop up a visible alert dialog. Selenium does NOT support JavaScript alerts that are generated in a page’s onload() event handler. In this case a visible dialog WILL be generated and Selenium will hang until someone manually clicks OK.
850 851 852 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 850 def get_alert() return string_command("getAlert", []) end |
#get_all_buttons ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all buttons on the page.
If a given button has no ID, it will appear as “” in this array.
1118 1119 1120 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1118 def () return string_array_command("getAllButtons", []) end |
#get_all_fields ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all input fields on the page.
If a given field has no ID, it will appear as “” in this array.
1138 1139 1140 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1138 def get_all_fields() return string_array_command("getAllFields", []) end |
#get_all_links ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all links on the page.
If a given link has no ID, it will appear as “” in this array.
1128 1129 1130 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1128 def get_all_links() return string_array_command("getAllLinks", []) end |
#get_all_window_ids ⇒ Object
Returns the IDs of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
1215 1216 1217 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1215 def get_all_window_ids() return string_array_command("getAllWindowIds", []) end |
#get_all_window_names ⇒ Object
Returns the names of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
1222 1223 1224 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1222 def get_all_window_names() return string_array_command("getAllWindowNames", []) end |
#get_all_window_titles ⇒ Object
Returns the titles of all windows that the browser knows about in an array.
1229 1230 1231 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1229 def get_all_window_titles() return string_array_command("getAllWindowTitles", []) end |
#get_attribute(attributeLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets the value of an element attribute. The value of the attribute may differ across browsers (this is the case for the “style” attribute, for example).
‘attributeLocator’ is an element locator followed by an @ sign and then the name of the attribute, e.g. “foo@bar”
1071 1072 1073 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1071 def get_attribute(attributeLocator) return string_command("getAttribute", [attributeLocator,]) end |
#get_attribute_from_all_windows(attributeName) ⇒ Object
Returns an array of JavaScript property values from all known windows having one.
‘attributeName’ is name of an attribute on the windows
1146 1147 1148 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1146 def get_attribute_from_all_windows(attributeName) return string_array_command("getAttributeFromAllWindows", [attributeName,]) end |
#get_body_text ⇒ Object
Gets the entire text of the page.
918 919 920 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 918 def get_body_text() return string_command("getBodyText", []) end |
#get_confirmation ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript confirmation dialog generated during the previous action.
By default, the confirm function will return true, having the same effect as manually clicking OK. This can be changed by prior execution of the chooseCancelOnNextConfirmation command.
If an confirmation is generated but you do not consume it with getConfirmation, the next Selenium action will fail.
NOTE: under Selenium, JavaScript confirmations will NOT pop up a visible dialog.
NOTE: Selenium does NOT support JavaScript confirmations that are generated in a page’s onload() event handler. In this case a visible dialog WILL be generated and Selenium will hang until you manually click OK.
879 880 881 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 879 def get_confirmation() return string_command("getConfirmation", []) end |
#get_cookie ⇒ Object
Return all cookies of the current page under test.
1448 1449 1450 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1448 def () return string_command("getCookie", []) end |
#get_cookie_by_name(name) ⇒ Object
Returns the value of the cookie with the specified name, or throws an error if the cookie is not present.
‘name’ is the name of the cookie
1456 1457 1458 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1456 def (name) return string_command("getCookieByName", [name,]) end |
#get_css_count(css) ⇒ Object
Returns the number of nodes that match the specified css selector, eg. “css=table” would give the number of tables.
‘css’ is the css selector to evaluate. do NOT wrap this expression in a ‘count()’ function; we will do that for you.
1341 1342 1343 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1341 def get_css_count(css) return number_command("getCssCount", [css,]) end |
#get_cursor_position(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the text cursor position in the given input element or textarea; beware, this may not work perfectly on all browsers.
Specifically, if the cursor/selection has been cleared by JavaScript, this command will tend to return the position of the last location of the cursor, even though the cursor is now gone from the page. This is filed as SEL-243.
This method will fail if the specified element isn’t an input element or textarea, or there is no cursor in the element.
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an input element or textarea
1311 1312 1313 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1311 def get_cursor_position(locator) return number_command("getCursorPosition", [locator,]) end |
#get_element_height(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the height of an element
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element
1298 1299 1300 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1298 def get_element_height(locator) return number_command("getElementHeight", [locator,]) end |
#get_element_index(locator) ⇒ Object
Get the relative index of an element to its parent (starting from 0). The comment node and empty text node will be ignored.
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element
1256 1257 1258 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1256 def get_element_index(locator) return number_command("getElementIndex", [locator,]) end |
#get_element_position_left(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the horizontal position of an element
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element OR an element itself
1274 1275 1276 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1274 def get_element_position_left(locator) return number_command("getElementPositionLeft", [locator,]) end |
#get_element_position_top(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the vertical position of an element
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element OR an element itself
1282 1283 1284 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1282 def get_element_position_top(locator) return number_command("getElementPositionTop", [locator,]) end |
#get_element_width(locator) ⇒ Object
Retrieves the width of an element
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an element
1290 1291 1292 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1290 def get_element_width(locator) return number_command("getElementWidth", [locator,]) end |
#get_eval(script) ⇒ Object
Gets the result of evaluating the specified JavaScript snippet. The snippet may have multiple lines, but only the result of the last line will be returned.
Note that, by default, the snippet will run in the context of the “selenium” object itself, so this
will refer to the Selenium object. Use window
to refer to the window of your application, e.g. window.document.getElementById('foo')
If you need to use a locator to refer to a single element in your application page, you can use this.browserbot.findElement("id=foo")
where “id=foo” is your locator.
‘script’ is the JavaScript snippet to run
964 965 966 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 964 def get_eval(script) return string_command("getEval", [script,]) end |
#get_expression(expression) ⇒ Object
Returns the specified expression.
This is useful because of JavaScript preprocessing. It is used to generate commands like assertExpression and waitForExpression.
‘expression’ is the value to return
1323 1324 1325 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1323 def get_expression(expression) return string_command("getExpression", [expression,]) end |
#get_html_source ⇒ Object
Returns the entire HTML source between the opening and closing “html” tags.
1237 1238 1239 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1237 def get_html_source() return string_command("getHtmlSource", []) end |
#get_location ⇒ Object
Gets the absolute URL of the current page.
904 905 906 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 904 def get_location() return string_command("getLocation", []) end |
#get_mouse_speed ⇒ Object
Returns the number of pixels between “mousemove” events during dragAndDrop commands (default=10).
1176 1177 1178 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1176 def get_mouse_speed() return number_command("getMouseSpeed", []) end |
#get_prompt ⇒ Object
Retrieves the message of a JavaScript question prompt dialog generated during the previous action.
Successful handling of the prompt requires prior execution of the answerOnNextPrompt command. If a prompt is generated but you do not get/verify it, the next Selenium action will fail. NOTE: under Selenium, JavaScript prompts will NOT pop up a visible dialog. NOTE: Selenium does NOT support JavaScript prompts that are generated in a page’s onload() event handler. In this case a visible dialog WILL be generated and Selenium will hang until someone manually clicks OK.
897 898 899 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 897 def get_prompt() return string_command("getPrompt", []) end |
#get_select_options(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option labels in the specified select drop-down.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1061 1062 1063 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1061 def (selectLocator) return string_array_command("getSelectOptions", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_id(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option element ID for selected option in the specified select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1045 1046 1047 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1045 def get_selected_id(selectLocator) return string_command("getSelectedId", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_ids(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option element IDs for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1037 1038 1039 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1037 def get_selected_ids(selectLocator) return string_array_command("getSelectedIds", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_index(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option index (option number, starting at 0) for selected option in the specified select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1029 1030 1031 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1029 def get_selected_index(selectLocator) return string_command("getSelectedIndex", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_indexes(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option indexes (option number, starting at 0) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1021 1022 1023 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1021 def get_selected_indexes(selectLocator) return string_array_command("getSelectedIndexes", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_label(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option label (visible text) for selected option in the specified select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
997 998 999 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 997 def get_selected_label(selectLocator) return string_command("getSelectedLabel", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_labels(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option labels (visible text) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
989 990 991 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 989 def get_selected_labels(selectLocator) return string_array_command("getSelectedLabels", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_value(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets option value (value attribute) for selected option in the specified select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1013 1014 1015 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1013 def get_selected_value(selectLocator) return string_command("getSelectedValue", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_selected_values(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Gets all option values (value attributes) for selected options in the specified select or multi-select element.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1005 1006 1007 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1005 def get_selected_values(selectLocator) return string_array_command("getSelectedValues", [selectLocator,]) end |
#get_speed ⇒ Object
Get execution speed (i.e., get the millisecond length of the delay following each selenium operation). By default, there is no such delay, i.e., the delay is 0 milliseconds.
See also setSpeed.
456 457 458 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 456 def get_speed() return string_command("getSpeed", []) end |
#get_table(tableCellAddress) ⇒ Object
Gets the text from a cell of a table. The cellAddress syntax tableLocator.row.column, where row and column start at 0.
‘tableCellAddress’ is a cell address, e.g. “foo.1.4”
981 982 983 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 981 def get_table(tableCellAddress) return string_command("getTable", [tableCellAddress,]) end |
#get_text(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets the text of an element. This works for any element that contains text. This command uses either the textContent (Mozilla-like browsers) or the innerText (IE-like browsers) of the element, which is the rendered text shown to the user.
‘locator’ is an element locator
939 940 941 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 939 def get_text(locator) return string_command("getText", [locator,]) end |
#get_title ⇒ Object
Gets the title of the current page.
911 912 913 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 911 def get_title() return string_command("getTitle", []) end |
#get_value(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets the (whitespace-trimmed) value of an input field (or anything else with a value parameter). For checkbox/radio elements, the value will be “on” or “off” depending on whether the element is checked or not.
‘locator’ is an element locator
928 929 930 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 928 def get_value(locator) return string_command("getValue", [locator,]) end |
#get_whether_this_frame_match_frame_expression(currentFrameString, target) ⇒ Object
Determine whether current/locator identify the frame containing this running code.
This is useful in proxy injection mode, where this code runs in every browser frame and window, and sometimes the selenium server needs to identify the “current” frame. In this case, when the test calls selectFrame, this routine is called for each frame to figure out which one has been selected. The selected frame will return true, while all others will return false.
‘currentFrameString’ is starting frame ‘target’ is new frame (which might be relative to the current one)
698 699 700 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 698 def get_whether_this_frame_match_frame_expression(currentFrameString,target) return boolean_command("getWhetherThisFrameMatchFrameExpression", [currentFrameString,target,]) end |
#get_whether_this_window_match_window_expression(currentWindowString, target) ⇒ Object
Determine whether currentWindowString plus target identify the window containing this running code.
This is useful in proxy injection mode, where this code runs in every browser frame and window, and sometimes the selenium server needs to identify the “current” window. In this case, when the test calls selectWindow, this routine is called for each window to figure out which one has been selected. The selected window will return true, while all others will return false.
‘currentWindowString’ is starting window ‘target’ is new window (which might be relative to the current one, e.g., “_parent”)
714 715 716 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 714 def get_whether_this_window_match_window_expression(currentWindowString,target) return boolean_command("getWhetherThisWindowMatchWindowExpression", [currentWindowString,target,]) end |
#get_xpath_count(xpath) ⇒ Object
Returns the number of nodes that match the specified xpath, eg. “//table” would give the number of tables.
‘xpath’ is the xpath expression to evaluate. do NOT wrap this expression in a ‘count()’ function; we will do that for you.
1332 1333 1334 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1332 def get_xpath_count(xpath) return number_command("getXpathCount", [xpath,]) end |
#go_back ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “back” button on their browser.
782 783 784 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 782 def go_back() remote_control_command("goBack", []) end |
#highlight(locator) ⇒ Object
Briefly changes the backgroundColor of the specified element yellow. Useful for debugging.
‘locator’ is an element locator
947 948 949 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 947 def highlight(locator) remote_control_command("highlight", [locator,]) end |
#ignore_attributes_without_value(ignore) ⇒ Object
Specifies whether Selenium will ignore xpath attributes that have no value, i.e. are the empty string, when using the non-native xpath evaluation engine. You’d want to do this for performance reasons in IE. However, this could break certain xpaths, for example an xpath that looks for an attribute whose value is NOT the empty string.
The hope is that such xpaths are relatively rare, but the user should have the option of using them. Note that this only influences xpath evaluation when using the ajaxslt engine (i.e. not “javascript-xpath”).
‘ignore’ is boolean, true means we’ll ignore attributes without value at the expense of xpath “correctness”; false means we’ll sacrifice speed for correctness.
1381 1382 1383 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1381 def ignore_attributes_without_value(ignore) remote_control_command("ignoreAttributesWithoutValue", [ignore,]) end |
#is_alert_present ⇒ Object
Has an alert occurred?
This function never throws an exception
809 810 811 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 809 def is_alert_present() return boolean_command("isAlertPresent", []) end |
#is_checked(locator) ⇒ Object
Gets whether a toggle-button (checkbox/radio) is checked. Fails if the specified element doesn’t exist or isn’t a toggle-button.
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to a checkbox or radio button
972 973 974 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 972 def is_checked(locator) return boolean_command("isChecked", [locator,]) end |
#is_confirmation_present ⇒ Object
Has confirm() been called?
This function never throws an exception
833 834 835 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 833 def is_confirmation_present() return boolean_command("isConfirmationPresent", []) end |
#is_cookie_present(name) ⇒ Object
Returns true if a cookie with the specified name is present, or false otherwise.
‘name’ is the name of the cookie
1464 1465 1466 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1464 def (name) return boolean_command("isCookiePresent", [name,]) end |
#is_editable(locator) ⇒ Object
Determines whether the specified input element is editable, ie hasn’t been disabled. This method will fail if the specified element isn’t an input element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
1108 1109 1110 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1108 def is_editable(locator) return boolean_command("isEditable", [locator,]) end |
#is_element_present(locator) ⇒ Object
Verifies that the specified element is somewhere on the page.
‘locator’ is an element locator
1087 1088 1089 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1087 def is_element_present(locator) return boolean_command("isElementPresent", [locator,]) end |
#is_ordered(locator1, locator2) ⇒ Object
Check if these two elements have same parent and are ordered siblings in the DOM. Two same elements will not be considered ordered.
‘locator1’ is an element locator pointing to the first element ‘locator2’ is an element locator pointing to the second element
1266 1267 1268 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1266 def is_ordered(locator1,locator2) return boolean_command("isOrdered", [locator1,locator2,]) end |
#is_prompt_present ⇒ Object
Has a prompt occurred?
This function never throws an exception
821 822 823 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 821 def is_prompt_present() return boolean_command("isPromptPresent", []) end |
#is_something_selected(selectLocator) ⇒ Object
Determines whether some option in a drop-down menu is selected.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu
1053 1054 1055 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1053 def is_something_selected(selectLocator) return boolean_command("isSomethingSelected", [selectLocator,]) end |
#is_text_present(pattern) ⇒ Object
Verifies that the specified text pattern appears somewhere on the rendered page shown to the user.
‘pattern’ is a pattern to match with the text of the page
1079 1080 1081 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1079 def is_text_present(pattern) return boolean_command("isTextPresent", [pattern,]) end |
#is_visible(locator) ⇒ Object
Determines if the specified element is visible. An element can be rendered invisible by setting the CSS “visibility” property to “hidden”, or the “display” property to “none”, either for the element itself or one if its ancestors. This method will fail if the element is not present.
‘locator’ is an element locator
1099 1100 1101 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1099 def is_visible(locator) return boolean_command("isVisible", [locator,]) end |
#key_down(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing a key (without releasing it yet).
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘keySequence’ is Either be a string(“" followed by the numeric keycode of the key to be pressed, normally the ASCII value of that key), or a single character. For example: ”w“, ”119“.
285 286 287 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 285 def key_down(locator,keySequence) remote_control_command("keyDown", [locator,keySequence,]) end |
#key_down_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing a key (without releasing it yet) by sending a native operating system keystroke. This function uses the java.awt.Robot class to send a keystroke; this more accurately simulates typing a key on the keyboard. It does not honor settings from the shiftKeyDown, controlKeyDown, altKeyDown and metaKeyDown commands, and does not target any particular HTML element. To send a keystroke to a particular element, focus on the element first before running this command.
‘keycode’ is an integer keycode number corresponding to a java.awt.event.KeyEvent; note that Java keycodes are NOT the same thing as JavaScript keycodes!
1689 1690 1691 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1689 def key_down_native(keycode) remote_control_command("keyDownNative", [keycode,]) end |
#key_press(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing and releasing a key.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘keySequence’ is Either be a string(“" followed by the numeric keycode of the key to be pressed, normally the ASCII value of that key), or a single character. For example: ”w“, ”119“.
220 221 222 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 220 def key_press(locator,keySequence) remote_control_command("keyPress", [locator,keySequence,]) end |
#key_press_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing and releasing a key by sending a native operating system keystroke. This function uses the java.awt.Robot class to send a keystroke; this more accurately simulates typing a key on the keyboard. It does not honor settings from the shiftKeyDown, controlKeyDown, altKeyDown and metaKeyDown commands, and does not target any particular HTML element. To send a keystroke to a particular element, focus on the element first before running this command.
‘keycode’ is an integer keycode number corresponding to a java.awt.event.KeyEvent; note that Java keycodes are NOT the same thing as JavaScript keycodes!
1713 1714 1715 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1713 def key_press_native(keycode) remote_control_command("keyPressNative", [keycode,]) end |
#key_up(locator, keySequence) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user releasing a key.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘keySequence’ is Either be a string(“" followed by the numeric keycode of the key to be pressed, normally the ASCII value of that key), or a single character. For example: ”w“, ”119“.
294 295 296 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 294 def key_up(locator,keySequence) remote_control_command("keyUp", [locator,keySequence,]) end |
#key_up_native(keycode) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user releasing a key by sending a native operating system keystroke. This function uses the java.awt.Robot class to send a keystroke; this more accurately simulates typing a key on the keyboard. It does not honor settings from the shiftKeyDown, controlKeyDown, altKeyDown and metaKeyDown commands, and does not target any particular HTML element. To send a keystroke to a particular element, focus on the element first before running this command.
‘keycode’ is an integer keycode number corresponding to a java.awt.event.KeyEvent; note that Java keycodes are NOT the same thing as JavaScript keycodes!
1701 1702 1703 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1701 def key_up_native(keycode) remote_control_command("keyUpNative", [keycode,]) end |
#meta_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the meta key and hold it down until doMetaUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
241 242 243 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 241 def () remote_control_command("metaKeyDown", []) end |
#meta_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the meta key.
248 249 250 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 248 def () remote_control_command("metaKeyUp", []) end |
#mouse_down(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the left mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
319 320 321 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 319 def mouse_down(locator) remote_control_command("mouseDown", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_down_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the left mouse button (without releasing it yet) at the specified location.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
338 339 340 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 338 def mouse_down_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("mouseDownAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#mouse_down_right(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the right mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
328 329 330 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 328 def mouse_down_right(locator) remote_control_command("mouseDownRight", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_down_right_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the right mouse button (without releasing it yet) at the specified location.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
348 349 350 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 348 def mouse_down_right_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("mouseDownRightAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#mouse_move(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
395 396 397 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 395 def mouse_move(locator) remote_control_command("mouseMove", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_move_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user pressing the mouse button (without releasing it yet) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
405 406 407 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 405 def mouse_move_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("mouseMoveAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#mouse_out(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user moving the mouse pointer away from the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
310 311 312 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 310 def mouse_out(locator) remote_control_command("mouseOut", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_over(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates a user hovering a mouse over the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
302 303 304 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 302 def mouse_over(locator) remote_control_command("mouseOver", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_up(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
357 358 359 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 357 def mouse_up(locator) remote_control_command("mouseUp", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_up_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) at the specified location.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
376 377 378 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 376 def mouse_up_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("mouseUpAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#mouse_up_right(locator) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the right mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) on the specified element.
‘locator’ is an element locator
366 367 368 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 366 def mouse_up_right(locator) remote_control_command("mouseUpRight", [locator,]) end |
#mouse_up_right_at(locator, coordString) ⇒ Object
Simulates the event that occurs when the user releases the right mouse button (i.e., stops holding the button down) at the specified location.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘coordString’ is specifies the x,y position (i.e. - 10,20) of the mouse event relative to the element returned by the locator.
386 387 388 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 386 def mouse_up_right_at(locator,coordString) remote_control_command("mouseUpRightAt", [locator,coordString,]) end |
#open(url) ⇒ Object
Opens an URL in the test frame. This accepts both relative and absolute URLs.
The “open” command waits for the page to load before proceeding, ie. the “AndWait” suffix is implicit.
Note: The URL must be on the same domain as the runner HTML due to security restrictions in the browser (Same Origin Policy). If you need to open an URL on another domain, use the Selenium Server to start a new browser session on that domain.
‘url’ is the URL to open; may be relative or absolute
571 572 573 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 571 def open(url) remote_control_command("open", [url,]) end |
#open_window(url, windowID) ⇒ Object
Opens a popup window (if a window with that ID isn’t already open). After opening the window, you’ll need to select it using the selectWindow command.
This command can also be a useful workaround for bug SEL-339. In some cases, Selenium will be unable to intercept a call to window.open (if the call occurs during or before the “onLoad” event, for example). In those cases, you can force Selenium to notice the open window’s name by using the Selenium openWindow command, using an empty (blank) url, like this: openWindow(“”, “myFunnyWindow”).
‘url’ is the URL to open, which can be blank ‘windowID’ is the JavaScript window ID of the window to select
587 588 589 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 587 def open_window(url,windowID) remote_control_command("openWindow", [url,windowID,]) end |
#refresh ⇒ Object
Simulates the user clicking the “Refresh” button on their browser.
789 790 791 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 789 def refresh() remote_control_command("refresh", []) end |
#remove_all_selections(locator) ⇒ Object
Unselects all of the selected options in a multi-select element.
‘locator’ is an element locator identifying a multi-select box
545 546 547 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 545 def remove_all_selections(locator) remote_control_command("removeAllSelections", [locator,]) end |
#remove_script(scriptTagId) ⇒ Object
Removes a script tag from the Selenium document identified by the given id. Does nothing if the referenced tag doesn’t exist.
‘scriptTagId’ is the id of the script element to remove.
1605 1606 1607 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1605 def remove_script(scriptTagId) remote_control_command("removeScript", [scriptTagId,]) end |
#remove_selection(locator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Remove a selection from the set of selected options in a multi-select element using an option locator.
‘locator’ is an element locator identifying a multi-select box ‘optionLocator’ is an option locator (a label by default)
537 538 539 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 537 def remove_selection(locator,optionLocator) remote_control_command("removeSelection", [locator,optionLocator,]) end |
#retrieve_last_remote_control_logs ⇒ Object
Retrieve the last messages logged on a specific remote control. Useful for error reports, especially when running multiple remote controls in a distributed environment. The maximum number of log messages that can be retrieve is configured on remote control startup.
1677 1678 1679 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1677 def retrieve_last_remote_control_logs() return string_command("retrieveLastRemoteControlLogs", []) end |
#rollup(rollupName, kwargs) ⇒ Object
Executes a command rollup, which is a series of commands with a unique name, and optionally arguments that control the generation of the set of commands. If any one of the rolled-up commands fails, the rollup is considered to have failed. Rollups may also contain nested rollups.
‘rollupName’ is the name of the rollup command ‘kwargs’ is keyword arguments string that influences how the rollup expands into commands
1577 1578 1579 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1577 def rollup(rollupName,kwargs) remote_control_command("rollup", [rollupName,kwargs,]) end |
#run_script(script) ⇒ Object
Creates a new “script” tag in the body of the current test window, and adds the specified text into the body of the command. Scripts run in this way can often be debugged more easily than scripts executed using Selenium’s “getEval” command. Beware that JS exceptions thrown in these script tags aren’t managed by Selenium, so you should probably wrap your script in try/catch blocks if there is any chance that the script will throw an exception.
‘script’ is the JavaScript snippet to run
1526 1527 1528 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1526 def run_script(script) remote_control_command("runScript", [script,]) end |
#select(selectLocator, optionLocator) ⇒ Object
Select an option from a drop-down using an option locator.
Option locators provide different ways of specifying options of an HTML Select element (e.g. for selecting a specific option, or for asserting that the selected option satisfies a specification). There are several forms of Select Option Locator.
-
label=labelPattern:
matches options based on their labels, i.e. the visible text. (This is the default.)
-
label=regexp:^ther
-
value=valuePattern:
matches options based on their values.
-
value=other
-
id=id:
matches options based on their ids.
-
id=option1
-
index=index:
matches an option based on its index (offset from zero).
-
index=2
If no option locator prefix is provided, the default behaviour is to match on label.
‘selectLocator’ is an element locator identifying a drop-down menu ‘optionLocator’ is an option locator (a label by default)
515 516 517 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 515 def select(selectLocator,optionLocator) remote_control_command("select", [selectLocator,optionLocator,]) end |
#select_frame(locator) ⇒ Object
Selects a frame within the current window. (You may invoke this command multiple times to select nested frames.) To select the parent frame, use “relative=parent” as a locator; to select the top frame, use “relative=top”. You can also select a frame by its 0-based index number; select the first frame with “index=0”, or the third frame with “index=2”.
You may also use a DOM expression to identify the frame you want directly, like this: dom=frames["main"].frames["subframe"]
‘locator’ is an element locator identifying a frame or iframe
682 683 684 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 682 def select_frame(locator) remote_control_command("selectFrame", [locator,]) end |
#select_pop_up(windowID) ⇒ Object
Simplifies the process of selecting a popup window (and does not offer functionality beyond what selectWindow()
already provides).
-
If
windowID
is either not specified, or specified as
“null”, the first non-top window is selected. The top window is the one that would be selected by selectWindow()
without providing a windowID
. This should not be used when more than one popup window is in play.
-
Otherwise, the window will be looked up considering
windowID
as the following in order: 1) the “name” of the window, as specified to window.open()
; 2) a javascript variable which is a reference to a window; and 3) the title of the window. This is the same ordered lookup performed by selectWindow
.
‘windowID’ is an identifier for the popup window, which can take on a number of different meanings
657 658 659 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 657 def select_pop_up(windowID) remote_control_command("selectPopUp", [windowID,]) end |
#select_window(windowID) ⇒ Object
Selects a popup window using a window locator; once a popup window has been selected, all commands go to that window. To select the main window again, use null as the target.
Window locators provide different ways of specifying the window object: by title, by internal JavaScript “name,” or by JavaScript variable.
-
title=My Special Window:
Finds the window using the text that appears in the title bar. Be careful; two windows can share the same title. If that happens, this locator will just pick one.
-
name=myWindow:
Finds the window using its internal JavaScript “name” property. This is the second parameter “windowName” passed to the JavaScript method window.open(url, windowName, windowFeatures, replaceFlag) (which Selenium intercepts).
-
var=variableName:
Some pop-up windows are unnamed (anonymous), but are associated with a JavaScript variable name in the current application window, e.g. “window.foo = window.open(url);”. In those cases, you can open the window using “var=foo”.
If no window locator prefix is provided, we’ll try to guess what you mean like this: 1.) if windowID is null, (or the string “null”) then it is assumed the user is referring to the original window instantiated by the browser). 2.) if the value of the “windowID” parameter is a JavaScript variable name in the current application window, then it is assumed that this variable contains the return value from a call to the JavaScript window.open() method. 3.) Otherwise, selenium looks in a hash it maintains that maps string names to window “names”. 4.) If that fails, we’ll try looping over all of the known windows to try to find the appropriate “title”. Since “title” is not necessarily unique, this may have unexpected behavior. If you’re having trouble figuring out the name of a window that you want to manipulate, look at the Selenium log messages which identify the names of windows created via window.open (and therefore intercepted by Selenium). You will see messages like the following for each window as it is opened: debug: window.open call intercepted; window ID (which you can use with selectWindow()) is "myNewWindow"
In some cases, Selenium will be unable to intercept a call to window.open (if the call occurs during or before the “onLoad” event, for example). (This is bug SEL-339.) In those cases, you can force Selenium to notice the open window’s name by using the Selenium openWindow command, using an empty (blank) url, like this: openWindow(“”, “myFunnyWindow”).
‘windowID’ is the JavaScript window ID of the window to select
635 636 637 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 635 def select_window(windowID) remote_control_command("selectWindow", [windowID,]) end |
#set_browser_log_level(logLevel) ⇒ Object
Sets the threshold for browser-side logging messages; log messages beneath this threshold will be discarded. Valid logLevel strings are: “debug”, “info”, “warn”, “error” or “off”. To see the browser logs, you need to either show the log window in GUI mode, or enable browser-side logging in Selenium RC.
‘logLevel’ is one of the following: “debug”, “info”, “warn”, “error” or “off”
1512 1513 1514 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1512 def set_browser_log_level(logLevel) remote_control_command("setBrowserLogLevel", [logLevel,]) end |
#set_context(context) ⇒ Object
Writes a message to the status bar and adds a note to the browser-side log.
‘context’ is the message to be sent to the browser
1622 1623 1624 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1622 def set_context(context) remote_control_command("setContext", [context,]) end |
#set_cursor_position(locator, position) ⇒ Object
Moves the text cursor to the specified position in the given input element or textarea. This method will fail if the specified element isn’t an input element or textarea.
‘locator’ is an element locator pointing to an input element or textarea ‘position’ is the numerical position of the cursor in the field; position should be 0 to move the position to the beginning of the field. You can also set the cursor to -1 to move it to the end of the field.
1247 1248 1249 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1247 def set_cursor_position(locator,position) remote_control_command("setCursorPosition", [locator,position,]) end |
#set_mouse_speed(pixels) ⇒ Object
Configure the number of pixels between “mousemove” events during dragAndDrop commands (default=10). Setting this value to 0 means that we’ll send a “mousemove” event to every single pixel in between the start location and the end location; that can be very slow, and may cause some browsers to force the JavaScript to timeout. If the mouse speed is greater than the distance between the two dragged objects, we’ll just send one “mousemove” at the start location and then one final one at the end location.
‘pixels’ is the number of pixels between “mousemove” events
1169 1170 1171 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1169 def set_mouse_speed(pixels) remote_control_command("setMouseSpeed", [pixels,]) end |
#set_speed(value) ⇒ Object
Set execution speed (i.e., set the millisecond length of a delay which will follow each selenium operation). By default, there is no such delay, i.e., the delay is 0 milliseconds.
‘value’ is the number of milliseconds to pause after operation
446 447 448 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 446 def set_speed(value) remote_control_command("setSpeed", [value,]) end |
#set_timeout(timeout) ⇒ Object
Specifies the amount of time that Selenium will wait for actions to complete.
Actions that require waiting include “open” and the “waitFor*” actions.
The default timeout is 30 seconds.
‘timeout’ is a timeout in milliseconds, after which the action will return with an error
1410 1411 1412 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1410 def set_timeout(timeout) remote_control_command("setTimeout", [timeout,]) end |
#shift_key_down ⇒ Object
Press the shift key and hold it down until doShiftUp() is called or a new page is loaded.
227 228 229 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 227 def shift_key_down() remote_control_command("shiftKeyDown", []) end |
#shift_key_up ⇒ Object
Release the shift key.
234 235 236 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 234 def shift_key_up() remote_control_command("shiftKeyUp", []) end |
#shut_down_selenium_server ⇒ Object
Kills the running Selenium Server and all browser sessions. After you run this command, you will no longer be able to send commands to the server; you can’t remotely start the server once it has been stopped. Normally you should prefer to run the “stop” command, which terminates the current browser session, rather than shutting down the entire server.
1668 1669 1670 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1668 def shut_down_selenium_server() remote_control_command("shutDownSeleniumServer", []) end |
#submit(formLocator) ⇒ Object
Submit the specified form. This is particularly useful for forms without submit buttons, e.g. single-input “Search” forms.
‘formLocator’ is an element locator for the form you want to submit
554 555 556 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 554 def submit(formLocator) remote_control_command("submit", [formLocator,]) end |
#type(locator, value) ⇒ Object
Sets the value of an input field, as though you typed it in.
Can also be used to set the value of combo boxes, check boxes, etc. In these cases, value should be the value of the option selected, not the visible text.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘value’ is the value to type
418 419 420 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 418 def type(locator,value) remote_control_command("type", [locator,value,]) end |
#type_keys(locator, value) ⇒ Object
Simulates keystroke events on the specified element, as though you typed the value key-by-key.
This is a convenience method for calling keyDown, keyUp, keyPress for every character in the specified string; this is useful for dynamic UI widgets (like auto-completing combo boxes) that require explicit key events. Unlike the simple “type” command, which forces the specified value into the page directly, this command may or may not have any visible effect, even in cases where typing keys would normally have a visible effect. For example, if you use “typeKeys” on a form element, you may or may not see the results of what you typed in the field. In some cases, you may need to use the simple “type” command to set the value of the field and then the “typeKeys” command to send the keystroke events corresponding to what you just typed.
‘locator’ is an element locator ‘value’ is the value to type
437 438 439 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 437 def type_keys(locator,value) remote_control_command("typeKeys", [locator,value,]) end |
#uncheck(locator) ⇒ Object
Uncheck a toggle-button (checkbox/radio)
‘locator’ is an element locator
472 473 474 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 472 def uncheck(locator) remote_control_command("uncheck", [locator,]) end |
#use_xpath_library(libraryName) ⇒ Object
Allows choice of one of the available libraries.
‘libraryName’ is name of the desired library Only the following three can be chosen: * “ajaxslt” - Google’s library* “javascript-xpath” - Cybozu Labs’ faster library* “default” - The default library. Currently the default library is “ajaxslt” . If libraryName isn’t one of these three, then no change will be made.
1613 1614 1615 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1613 def use_xpath_library(libraryName) remote_control_command("useXpathLibrary", [libraryName,]) end |
#wait_for_condition(script, timeout) ⇒ Object
Runs the specified JavaScript snippet repeatedly until it evaluates to “true”. The snippet may have multiple lines, but only the result of the last line will be considered.
Note that, by default, the snippet will be run in the runner’s test window, not in the window of your application. To get the window of your application, you can use the JavaScript snippet selenium.browserbot.getCurrentWindow()
, and then run your JavaScript in there
‘script’ is the JavaScript snippet to run ‘timeout’ is a timeout in milliseconds, after which this command will return with an error
1398 1399 1400 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1398 def wait_for_condition(script,timeout) remote_control_command("waitForCondition", [script,timeout,]) end |
#wait_for_frame_to_load(frameAddress, timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a new frame to load.
Selenium constantly keeps track of new pages and frames loading, and sets a “newPageLoaded” flag when it first notices a page load.
See waitForPageToLoad for more information.
‘frameAddress’ is FrameAddress from the server side ‘timeout’ is a timeout in milliseconds, after which this command will return with an error
1441 1442 1443 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1441 def wait_for_frame_to_load(frameAddress,timeout) remote_control_command("waitForFrameToLoad", [frameAddress,timeout,]) end |
#wait_for_page_to_load(timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a new page to load.
You can use this command instead of the “AndWait” suffixes, “clickAndWait”, “selectAndWait”, “typeAndWait” etc. (which are only available in the JS API). Selenium constantly keeps track of new pages loading, and sets a “newPageLoaded” flag when it first notices a page load. Running any other Selenium command after turns the flag to false. Hence, if you want to wait for a page to load, you must wait immediately after a Selenium command that caused a page-load.
‘timeout’ is a timeout in milliseconds, after which this command will return with an error
1426 1427 1428 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1426 def wait_for_page_to_load(timeout) remote_control_command("waitForPageToLoad", [timeout,]) end |
#wait_for_pop_up(windowID, timeout) ⇒ Object
Waits for a popup window to appear and load up.
‘windowID’ is the JavaScript window “name” of the window that will appear (not the text of the title bar) If unspecified, or specified as “null”, this command will wait for the first non-top window to appear (don’t rely on this if you are working with multiple popups simultaneously). ‘timeout’ is a timeout in milliseconds, after which the action will return with an error. If this value is not specified, the default Selenium timeout will be used. See the setTimeout() command.
723 724 725 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 723 def wait_for_pop_up(windowID,timeout) remote_control_command("waitForPopUp", [windowID,timeout,]) end |
#window_focus ⇒ Object
Gives focus to the currently selected window
1201 1202 1203 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1201 def window_focus() remote_control_command("windowFocus", []) end |
#window_maximize ⇒ Object
Resize currently selected window to take up the entire screen
1208 1209 1210 |
# File 'lib/selenium/client/legacy_driver.rb', line 1208 def window_maximize() remote_control_command("windowMaximize", []) end |