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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
Languages
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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

Chapter 4. Finding Elements

In this chapter, we will look at how to find elements on the page using the WebDriver API. One of the things that we learned in the previous chapter was that WebDriver and its architecture have a major component called driver. This has the commands to find elements.

Let's start with the different commands. We begin with the helper commands and then move on to the more generic commands, which take different types of objects. We will finish the chapter with some helpful techniques when interacting with element finding.

Two major learning points are as follows:

  • Finding elements on the page by their ID, name, ClassName, XPath, and link list
  • Tips to use find element calls

So let's get on with it. When working with the following examples, we are going to assume that you have instantiated a WebDriver object by using the following code:

  WebDriver driver = new FirefoxDriver(); 

You can use the following example class with TestNG. The test is a stub that...

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