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Learning Selenium Testing Tools - Third Edition

You're reading from   Learning Selenium Testing Tools - Third Edition Leverage the power of Selenium to build your own real-time test cases from scratch

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784396497
Length 318 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Raghavendra Prasad MG Raghavendra Prasad MG
Author Profile Icon Raghavendra Prasad MG
Raghavendra Prasad MG
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Selenium IDE FREE CHAPTER 2. Locators 3. Overview of the Selenium WebDriver 4. Finding Elements 5. Design Patterns 6. Working with WebDriver 7. Automation Framework Development and Building Utilities 8. Mobile Devices 9. Getting Started with the Selenium Grid 10. Advanced User Interactions 11. Working with HTML5 12. Advanced Topics 13. Migrating from Remote Control to WebDriver A. Automation Prerequisites for Selenium Automation B. Answers for Self-test Questions Index

Leveraging the XPath axis with elements

As we have seen, XPath is normally only used if the element we need to interact with is not accessible by normal means. In this section of the chapter, we will have a look at leveraging the XPath axis in our queries to find the element that we wish to interact with. An example that I have used in the real world was to find a table cell that had specific text, then traverse the tree backwards to find the edit button so that I can click on it. This may seem laborious just to click on an edit button, but it is extremely common according to the Selenium users forum on Google Groups.

Using the XPath axis

In the first example, we found a button and then its sibling. In this example, the query that we will generate is equivalent to xpath=//div[@class='leftdiv']/input[2].

  1. We will start by finding the first element for our query, which is //input[@value='Button with ID']. Place this element into the Selenium IDE Target textbox and see which...
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