A small library of WebDriver locators and more for AngularJS (v1.x) and Angular (v2 through v12), for Java. It works with Firefox, Chrome and all the other Selenium-WebDriver browsers.
We have taken JavaScript from Angular's Protractor project. While ngWebDriver perfectly compliments the Java version of WebDriver, it has to pass JavaScript up to the browser to interoperate with Angular, and the Protractor project has done the hard work (including testing) to make that solid. This project benefits from that work.
You can use ngWebDriver today with the regular Java Selenium2/WebDriver libraries. You can also use it with FluentSelenium for extra terseness.
Like Protractor, ngWebDriver works with Angular versions greater than 1.0.6/1.1.4, and is compatible with Angular 2 applications.
Note that for Angular 2 apps, the binding
and model
locators are not supported. We recommend using by.css
.
ChromeDriver driver = new ChromeDriver();
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
ngWebDriver.waitForAngularRequestsToFinish();
Do this if WebDriver can possibly run ahead of Angular's ability finish it's MVC stuff in your application. In some of the error cases (e.g. if it's not an angular application or if the root selector could not be found correctly in an angular 2 app, an error message is returned from the waitForAngularRequestsToFinish method.
As Protractor's repeater locator this works for arbitrary ng-repeat
elements, not just <tr>
or <td>
.
ByAngular.repeater("foo in f")
ByAngular.repeater("foo in f").row(17)
ByAngular.repeater("foo in f").row(17).column("foo.name")
ByAngular.repeater("foo in f").column("foo.name")
ByAngular.exactRepeater("foo in foos")
ByAngular.exactRepeater("foo in foos").row(17)
ByAngular.exactRepeater("foo in foos").row(17).column("foo.name")
ByAngular.exactRepeater("foo in foos").column("foo.name")
As Protractor's binding locator
ByAngular.binding("person.name")
ByAngular.binding("{{person.name}}")
// You can also use a substring for a partial match
ByAngular.binding("person");
As Protractor's exactBinding locator
ByAngular.exactBinding("person.name")
ByAngular.exactBinding("{{person.name}}")
ByAngular.model('person.name')
As Protractor's options locator
ByAngular.options("c for c in colors")
As Protractor's buttonText locator
ByAngular.buttonText("cLiCk mE")
As Protractor's partialButtonText locator
// If you have a button name "Click me to open", using just "click" would do if you partialButtonText
ByAngular.partialButtonText("cLiCk ")
As Protractor's cssContainingText locator
ByAngular.cssContainingText("#animals ul .pet", "dog")
The work in the same way at WebDriver's page object technology, there are a set of FindBy
annotations for ngWebDriver:
@ByAngularBinding.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularButtonText.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularButtonText.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularCssContainingText.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularExactBinding.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularModel.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularOptions.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularPartialButtonText.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularRepeater.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularRepeaterCell.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularRepeaterColumn.FindBy(..)
@ByAngularRepeaterRow.FindBy(..)
Declare them above fields as you would have done for FindBy
in the regular WebDriver and
continue to to use PageFactory.initElements(..)
as normal. Refer to the parameters for the new
FindBy
static inner classes as there's rootSelector
argument that is optional, but should
have been tried before you raise a bug with ngWebDriver.
As with Protractor, you can change items in an Angular model, or retrieve them regardless of whether they appear in the UI or not.
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
// change something via the model defined in $scope
ngWebDriver.mutate(formElement, "person.name", "'Wilma'");
// Note Wilma wrapped in single-quotes as it has to be a valid JavaScript
// string literal when it arrives browser-side for execution
As a JSON string:
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
// Get something via the model defined in $scope
String personJson = ngWebDriver.retrieveJson(formElement, "person");
As a string:
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
// Get something via the model defined in $scope
String personName = ngWebDriver.retrieveAsString(formElement, "person.name");
As a number:
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
// Get something via the model defined in $scope
Long personAge = ngWebDriver.retrieveAsLong(formElement, "person.age");
As Map/dict:
NgWebDriver ngWebDriver = new NgWebDriver(driver);
// Get something via the model defined in $scope
Map person = (Map) ngWebDriver.retrieve(formElement, "person");
// note - could be List instead of a Map - WebDriver makes a late decision on that
Getting "Cannot read property '$$testability' of undefined" ?
If you're seeing $$testability
referenced in a WebDriver error, then work out in you have
correctly set selector for the "root element" on the Angular app. Specifically have you
used .withRootSelector(..)
in situations where you need to use it? Details about how to recover from that here...
To specify a different "root selector" to help ngWebDriver find the Angular app, take a look at what is defined in the ng-app
attribute in the page in question. Examples:
NgWebDriver ngwd = new NgWebDriver(webDriver).withRootSelector("something-custom");
ByAngular.Factory baf = ngwd.makeByAngularFactory()
WebElement element = webDriver.findElement(baf.exactRepeater("day in days"));
element.click();
// locators
ByAngular.withRootSelector("something-custom").exactRepeater("day in days");
// or
ByAngular.Factory baf = ByAngular.withRootSelector("something-custom");
ByAngularRepeater foo = baf.exactRepeater("day in days");
Referring to a handy StackOverflow questions - No injector found for element argument to getTestability, you can use the applicable selector for your Angular app:
.withRootSelector("[ng-app]")
- matching an element that has the arributeng-app
(this is the default).withRootSelector("\"app-root\"")
- matching an element that has the element nameapp-root
.withRootSelector("#my-app")
- matching an idmy-app
.withRootSelector("[fooBar]")
- matching an attributefooBar
on any element.withRootSelector("[module=todoApp]")
- the "todo app" module (amongst others) on the https://angularjs.org home page.
There's a reference to css selectors you'll need to read - https://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css_selectors.asp - because that's the type of string it is going to require.
Read the five or so bug reports on $$testability and how (most likely) you have to learn a little about you application so that you can use .withRootSelector("\"abc123\"")
. Those bug reports: https://github.com/paul-hammant/ngWebDriver/issues?issue+testability. Also deeply read the css_selectors page on w3schools.com (link above) so you can fine tune your selector fu before filing a bug against this project.
Returns the URL of the page.
String absoluteUrl = new NgWebDriver(driver).getLocationAbsUrl();
All our usage examples are in a single test class:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.paulhammant</groupId>
<artifactId>ngwebdriver</artifactId>
<version>1.1.5</version>
<!-- You might want to delete the following line if you get "package com.paulhammant.ngwebdriver does not exist" errors -->
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<!-- you still need to have a dependency for preferred version of
Selenium/WebDriver. That should be 3.3.1 or above -->
Download from Mavens Central Repo
Last Release: 1.1.5 - Feb 22, 2020
Refer CHANGELOG
- take a look all of this README - it is not that long
- take a look at the issues (open and closed)
- read the Code of Conduct and raise an issue, but be sure to make it really really easy for committers to reproduce your error. Like a clone and a build and - bang - perfect reproduction.
- if there's some reason you can't do the reproduction on GitHub contact Paul Hammant - [email protected] - for custom support.