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End-to-End Web Testing with Cypress

You're reading from   End-to-End Web Testing with Cypress Explore techniques for automated frontend web testing with Cypress and JavaScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839213854
Length 240 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Waweru Mwaura Waweru Mwaura
Author Profile Icon Waweru Mwaura
Waweru Mwaura
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Cypress as an End-to-End Testing Solution for Frontend Applications
2. Chapter 1: Installing and Setting Up Cypress FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Differences between Selenium WebDriver and Cypress 4. Chapter 3: Working with Cypress Command-Line Tools 5. Chapter 4: Writing Your First Test 6. Chapter 5: Debugging Cypress Tests 7. Section 2: Automated Tests with the TDD Approach
8. Chapter 6: Writing Cypress Tests Using the TDD approach 9. Chapter 7: Understanding Element Interaction in Cypress 10. Chapter 8: Understanding Variables and Aliases in Cypress 11. Chapter 9: Advanced Uses of Cypress Test Runner 12. Section 3: Automated Testing for Your Web Application
13. Chapter 10: Exercise – Navigation and Network Requests 14. Chapter 11: Exercise – Stubbing and Spying XHR Requests 15. Chapter 12: Visual Testing in Cypress 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding errors on a test runner

In this section, we will dissect Cypress errors on the test runner, thus unpacking the contents of the errors thrown by Cypress and how to interpret them. We will cover different types of information that are present in Cypress errors, including the error name, the error message, the code frame file, the stack trace, the print to console option, and learn more. Understanding errors in Cypress will not only help us write better tests but also guide us through the debugging process when our tests fail.

Cypress excels when it comes to logging exceptions in a test failure event. Cypress not only logs information about which tests are failing but goes ahead and drills into specific information about the error that was encountered. Errors such as successful test executions are visible on the Cypress command log and provide descriptive pieces of information that could have led to the error being encountered. At times, Cypress even prints suggestions...

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