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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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Toc

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

History of Selenium

With web applications becoming the de facto approach to developing end user applications, a solution to test is needed. This means more and more emphasis is needed on a browser automation framework to help with checking the site.

For years, people have been using Selenium IDE and Selenium RC to drive a number of different types of browsers. Selenium, when originally created by Jason Huggins, solved the issue of getting the browser to do user interactions.

This is a good automation framework; however, it is limited by the JavaScript sandbox in browsers. The JavaScript sandbox enforces security policies while JavaScript is executing to prevent malicious code executing on the client machine. The main security policy people come across is the Same Origin Policy. If you need to move from HTTP to HTTPS, like you normally would during a log on process, the browser would block the action because we are no longer in the same origin. This was quite infuriating for an average developer...

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