import { Selector } from 'testcafe';
fixture("TestCafe Example")
.page("http://devexpress.github.io/testcafe/example");
test("Fill out and submit form", async t => {
await t.typeText("#developer-name", "Harun Jonuzi");
//I Want to verify if these Checkboxes are Selected
await t
.click("#remote-testing")
.click("#reusing-js-code")
.click("#background-parallel-testing");
await t.click("#macos");
const preferredInterface = Selector("#preferred-interface");
await t
.click(preferredInterface)
.click(preferredInterface.find("option").withText("JavaScript API"));
const submitButton = Selector("#submit-button");
await t
.expect(submitButton.hasAttribute("disabled")).notOk();
await t.click(submitButton);
const headerInfo = Selector("#article-header");
await t.expect(headerInfo.innerText).eql("Thank you, Harun Jonuzi!");
})
My question is commented out on the 6th line of the code as you can see it.
I am trying o figure out how to add an assertion to verify that the checkboxes are actually checked, but I am new to TestCafe, just wanted to see If I can get some help from here.
You can use the checked property of the DOMNodeState Object, for example:
await t
.click("#remote-testing")
.expect(Selector('#remote-testing').checked).eql(true);
So right now I have a grabResult.js page that I use to grab a result:
module.exports = async function grabResult(page) {
const name = await page.$eval(
'divtograbname',
(el) => el.innerText
);
const price = await page.$eval(
'divtograbprice',
(el) => el.innerText
);
return { name, price };
};
Using the below code on my main app.js page I can output the log result successfully:
while (true) {
const result = await grabResult(page);
console.log(result);
The above is outputting both: name and price
The next step is I'm trying to put name and price into the fields on my website.
I know how to fill the form field with my desired value:
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_name]', 'mydesiredvalue');
Basically, I'm trying to fill my form fields with my grabbed name and price values.
I have tried:
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_name]', 'name');
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_price]', 'price');
The above just fill the fields with text: 'name' and 'price'. It can't identify the return values from my grabResult page.
I have also tried
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_name]', $name);
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_price]', $price);
I have even tried this to see if it fill both into one:
await page.$eval('input[name=wc_name]', console.log(result));
Can't make it work.
I know I'm missing something here. I'm not a coder. Just trying to combine few blocks into one.
Help would be appreciated.
You are getting back something called an object, it looks like this:
{
name: 'name_value',
price: 1
}
name and price are properties. In order to get the property price, you can type my_object_name.price, so in your example result.price.
Then in Puppeteer, you usually fill values with page.type() method:
await page.type('input[name=wc_name]', result.name);
await page.type('input[name=wc_price]', result.price);
This should work fine.
I am validating if the text box is empty or not. I am not sure what am I doing wrong here.
Page Object method
async getTextVal(){
await this.t.selectText(this.editor) //selecting the text box
return this.editor.innerText; //fetching the value in the textbox
}
TestCase
await t.expect(element.getTextVal()).eql(''); //assert statement
the getTextVal works fine if there is a value present. But checking empty value it fails
try
Page Object method
async getTextVal(){
await this.t.selectText(this.editor) //selecting the text box
return await this.editor.innerText; //fetching the value in the textbox
}
TestCase
await t.expect(await element.getTextVal()).eql(''); //assert statement
Also, without a method just a selector this can be done like so:
await t.expect(selector.innerText).eql('');
You can also setup your selector in a page object file:
import { Selector, t } from "testcafe";
class PageObjectFile {
constructor() {
// input field, this could be many different styles of selectors / frameworks
this.inputField = Selector('.class-input-element');
this.inputFieldTwo = Selector('#id-input-element');
}
}
export default PageObjectFile;
And your test file like this:
import PageObjectFile from "/PageObjectFile";
let pageObjectFile = new PageObjectFile();
fixture `Tests input field is empty`
.page(`https://examplepage.com`)
test(`User see's an empty input field`, async t => {
await t.expect(pageObjectFile.inputField.innerText).eql('');
});
Let's say I have a collection called 'users'. When someone clicks the upvote button, I want it to update the user document with an entry that's the slug from the page they are viewing. However, I'm not sure how to accomplish it using the code I have.
voteUp() {
const voteup_ref = db.collection("builds").doc(this.$route.params.slug)
const voteuser_ref = db.collection("users").doc(this.alias)
return db.runTransaction(t => {
return t.get(voteup_ref).then(doc => {
const newCount = doc.data().voteup + 1
const NewSlug = voteuser_ref
t.update(voteup_ref, {
voteup: newCount
})
t.update(voteuser_ref, {
NewSlug: 'voteup'
})
});
})
},
So, if someone is viewing a page with the slug of 'my-awesome-comment', I want 'my-awesome-comment' to be entered in the user's document with a value of "voteup".
What's actually happening is that it will write an entry to the user document as I expect, but it's entering the field name as 'NewSlug' with a value of "voteup" instead of whatever the slug actually is.
What am I doing wrong?
The way you've written the JSON object NewSlug itself is the property name, instead of using its value. To do the latter, you need to use square bracket notation ([]):
let update = {};
update[NewSlug] = 'voteup';
t.update(voteuser_ref, update)
I am trying to aggregate a list of dates from a data table, written in Angular, in a Protractor test. I'm doing the aggregation from a PageObject class that is called in the Protractor test. I know that my code is successfully grabbing the text I want, but when I try to console.log the returned array, I get an empty array. I'm still new to Javascript/Typescript, Angular, and Protractor and this may be a result of my newness to the asynchronous nature of this development environment.
Code is as follows,
The PageObject SpecMapper class with method:
import { browser, element, by } from 'protractor';
export class SpecMapperPage {
getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues() {
let stringDatesArray: Array<string> = [];
// currently this css selector gets rows in both import and export tables
// TODO: get better identifiers on the import and export tables and columns
element.all(by.css('md-card-content tbody tr.ng-tns-c3-0')).each(function(row, index){
// check outerHTML for presence of "unclickable", the rows in the export table
row.getAttribute('outerHTML').then(function(outerHTML:string) {
// specifically look for rows without unclickable
if(outerHTML.indexOf("unclickable") < 0){
// grab the columns and get the third column, where the date submitted field is
// TODO: get better identifiers on the import and export columns
row.all(by.css("td.ng-tns-c3-0")).get(2).getText().then(function(text:string) {
stringDatesArray.push(text);
});
}
});
});
return stringDatesArray;
}
}
I know it's not the prettiest code, but it's temporary place holder while my devs make me better attributes/classes/ids to grab my variables. Key things to note is that I create a string Array to hold the values I consider relevant to be returned when the method is finished.
I used WebStorm and put a breakpoint at the stringDatesArray.push(text) and return stringDatesArray lines. The first line shows that the text variable has a string variable that I'm looking for and is successfully getting pushed. I see the success in debug mode as I can see the stringDatesArray and see the values in it. The second line though, the array return, shows that the local variable stringDatesArray is empty. This is echoed in the following code when I try to console.log the array:
The Protractor run Spec class with my test in it:
import { SpecMapperPage } from "./app.po";
import {browser, ExpectedConditions} from "protractor";
describe('spec mapper app', () => {
let page: SpecMapperPage;
let PROJECT_ID: string = '57';
let PROJECT_NAME: string = 'DO NOT DELETE - AUTOMATED TESTING PROJECT';
beforeEach(() => {
page = new SpecMapperPage();
});
describe('import/export page', () => {
it('verify sort order is desc', () => {
browser.waitForAngularEnabled(false);
// Step 1: Launch Map Data from Dashboard
page.navigateTo(PROJECT_ID);
browser.driver.sleep(5000).then(() => {
// Verify: Mapping Screen displays
// Verify on the specmapper page by checking the breadcrumbs
expect(page.getProjectNameBreadCrumbText()).toContain(PROJECT_NAME);
expect(page.getProjectMapperBreadCrumbText()).toEqual("MAPPER");
// Verify: Verify Latest Submitted Date is displayed at the top
// Verify: Verify the Submitted Date column is in descending order
console.log(page.getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues());
});
});
});
});
I acknowledge that this code is not actively using the niceties of Protractor, there's a known issue with our app that will not be addressed for a couple of months, so I am accessing the driver directly 99% of the time.
You'll note that I call the method I posted above as the very last line in the browser.driver.sleep().then() clause, page.getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues().
I thought maybe I was running into asynchronous issues with the call being done before the page was loaded, thus I put it in the .then() clause; but learned with debugging that was not the case. This code should work once I have the array returning properly though.
The console.log is printing an empty [] array. That is synonymous with the results I saw when debugging the above method directly in the PageObject SpecMapper class. I wish to do some verification that the strings are returned properly formatted, and then I'm going to do some date order comparisons. I feel like returning an array of data retrieved from a page is not an unusual request, but I can't seem to find a good way to Google what I'm trying to do.
My apologies if I am hitting some very obvious roadblock, I'm still learning the nuances of Typescript/Angular/Protractor. Thank you for your consideration!
My attempted to used collated promises seemed promising, but fell through on execution.
My Updated PageObject SpecMapper Class
import {browser, element, by, protractor} from 'protractor';
export class SpecMapperPage {
getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues() {
let promisesArray = [];
let stringDatesArray: Array<string> = [];
// This CSS selector grabs the import table and any cells with the label .created-date
element.all(by.css('.import-component .created-date')).each(function(cell, index) {
// cell.getText().then(function(text:string) {
// console.log(text);
// });
promisesArray.push(cell.getText());
});
return protractor.promise.all(promisesArray).then(function(results) {
for(let result of results) {
stringDatesArray.push(result);
}
return stringDatesArray;
});
}
}
My Updated Spec test Using The Updated SpecMapper PO Class
import { SpecMapperPage } from "./specMapper.po";
import {browser, ExpectedConditions} from "protractor";
describe('spec mapper app', () => {
let page: SpecMapperPage;
let PROJECT_ID: string = '57';
let PROJECT_NAME: string = 'DO NOT DELETE - AUTOMATED TESTING PROJECT';
beforeEach(() => {
page = new SpecMapperPage();
});
describe('import/export page', () => {
it('TC2963: ImportComponentGrid_ShouldDefaultSortBySubmittedDateInDescendingOrder_WhenPageIsLoaded', () => {
browser.waitForAngularEnabled(false);
// Step 1: Launch Map Data from Dashboard
page.navigateTo(PROJECT_ID);
browser.driver.sleep(5000).then(() => {
// Verify: Mapping Screen displays
// Verify on the specmapper page by checking the breadcrumbs
expect(page.getProjectNameBreadCrumbText()).toContain(PROJECT_NAME);
expect(page.getProjectMapperBreadCrumbText()).toEqual("MAPPER");
// Verify: Verify Latest Submitted Date is displayed at the top
// Verify: Verify the Submitted Date column is in descending order
page.getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues().then(function(results) {
for(let value of results) {
console.log("a value is: " + value);
}
});
});
});
});
});
When I breakpoint in the PO class at the return stringDatesArray; line, I have the following variables in my differing scopes. Note that the promisesArray has 3 objects, but the results array going into the protractor.promise.all( block has 0 objects. I'm not sure what my disconnect is. :/
I think I'm running into a scopes problem that I am having issues understanding. You'll note the commented out promise resolution on the getText(), and this was my POC proving that I am getting the string values I'm expecting, so I'm not sure why it's not working in the Promise Array structure presented as a solution below.
Only other related question that I could find has to do with grabbing a particular row of a table, not specifically aggregating the data to be returned for test verification in Protractor. You can find it here if you're interested.
As you've alluded to your issue is caused by the console.log returning the value of the variable before its actually been populated.
I've taken a snippet from this answer which should allow you to solve it: Is there a way to resolve multiple promises with Protractor?
var x = element(by.id('x')).sendKeys('xxx');
var y = element(by.id('y')).sendKeys('yyy');
var z = element(by.id('z')).sendKeys('zzz');
myFun(x,y,z);
//isEnabled() is contained in the expect() function, so it'll wait for
// myFun() promise to be fulfilled
expect(element(by.id('myButton')).isEnabled()).toBe(true);
// in a common function library
function myFun(Xel,Yel,Zel) {
return protractor.promise.all([Xel,Yel,Zel]).then(function(results){
var xText = results[0];
var yText = results[1];
var zText = results[2];
});
}
So in your code it would be something like
getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues() {
let promisesArray = [];
let stringDatesArray: Array<string> = [];
// currently this css selector gets rows in both import and export tables
// TODO: get better identifiers on the import and export tables and columns
element.all(by.css('md-card-content tbody tr.ng-tns-c3-0')).each(function(row, index){
// check outerHTML for presence of "unclickable", the rows in the export table
row.getAttribute('outerHTML').then(function(outerHTML:string) {
// specifically look for rows without unclickable
if(outerHTML.indexOf("unclickable") < 0){
// grab the columns and get the third column, where the date submitted field is
// TODO: get better identifiers on the import and export columns
promisesArray.push(row.all(by.css("td.ng-tns-c3-0")).get(2).getText());
}
});
});
return protractor.promise.all(promisesArray).then(function(results){
// In here you'll have access to the results
});
}
Theres quite a few different ways you could do it. You could process the data in that method at the end or I think you could return the array within that "then", and access it like so:
page.getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues().then((res) =>{
//And then here you will have access to the array
})
I don't do the Typescript but if you're just looking to get an array of locator texts back from your method, something resembling this should work...
getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues() {
let stringDatesArray: Array<string> = [];
$$('.import-component .created-date').each((cell, index) => {
cell.getText().then(text => {
stringDatesArray.push(text);
});
}).then(() => {
return stringDatesArray;
});
}
The answer ended up related to the answer posted on How do I return the response from an asynchronous call?
The final PageObject class function:
import {browser, element, by, protractor} from 'protractor';
export class SpecMapperPage {
getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues() {
let stringDatesArray: Array<string> = [];
let promisesArray = [];
// return a promise promising that stringDatesArray will have an array of dates
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
// This CSS selector grabs the import table and any cells with the label .created-date
element.all(by.css('.import-component .created-date')).map((cell) => {
// Gather all the getText's we want the text from
promisesArray.push(cell.getText());
}).then(() => {
protractor.promise.all(promisesArray).then((results) => {
// Resolve the getText's values and shove into array we want to return
for(let result of results) {
stringDatesArray.push(result);
}
}).then(() => {
// Set the filled array as the resolution to the returned promise
resolve(stringDatesArray);
});
});
});
}
}
The final test class:
import { SpecMapperPage } from "./specMapper.po";
import {browser, ExpectedConditions} from "protractor";
describe('spec mapper app', () => {
let page: SpecMapperPage;
let PROJECT_ID: string = '57';
let PROJECT_NAME: string = 'DO NOT DELETE - AUTOMATED TESTING PROJECT';
beforeEach(() => {
page = new SpecMapperPage();
});
describe('import/export page', () => {
it('TC2963: ImportComponentGrid_ShouldDefaultSortBySubmittedDateInDescendingOrder_WhenPageIsLoaded', () => {
browser.waitForAngularEnabled(false);
// Step 1: Launch Map Data from Dashboard
page.navigateTo(PROJECT_ID);
browser.driver.sleep(5000).then(() => {
// Verify: Mapping Screen displays
// Verify on the specmapper page by checking the breadcrumbs
expect(page.getProjectNameBreadCrumbText()).toContain(PROJECT_NAME);
expect(page.getProjectMapperBreadCrumbText()).toEqual("MAPPER");
// Verify: Verify Latest Submitted Date is displayed at the top
// Verify: Verify the Submitted Date column is in descending order
page.getImportDateSubmittedColumnValues().then((results) => {
console.log(results);
});
});
});
});
});
The biggest thing was waiting for the different calls to get done running and then waiting for the stringDataArray to be filled. That required the promise(resolve,reject) structure I found in the SO post noted above. I ended up using the lambda (()=>{}) function calls instead of declared (function(){}) for a cleaner look, the method works the same either way. None of the other proposed solutions successfully propagated the array of strings back to my test. I'm working in Typescript, with Protractor.