Book Image

Selenium Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Dima Kovalenko
Book Image

Selenium Design Patterns and Best Practices

By: Dima Kovalenko

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Selenium Design Patterns and Best Practices
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Comparing Selenium commands in multiple languages


Translating recorded tests from IDE into Ruby is rather simple, and we can get started even if we do not have any previous programming experience; learning as we go works just fine. The most exciting part is that these commands are even easier to translate from Ruby to any other programming language. Here are a couple of examples of the usage of the sendKeys() method that we used in the preceding example:

Language

Command

Ruby

element.send_keys("cheese");

Java

element.sendKeys("cheese");

C-Sharp

element.SendKeys("cheese");

Python

element.send_keys("cheese");

JavaScript

element.sendKeys("cheese");

The consistency of the WebDriver API makes it incredibly easy to port your knowledge of the test from one language to another. This is great news for you, the test engineer, because you become more valuable to your company. You can be dropped in on any web project, written in any programming language, and start writing tests right away! Information and examples of different WebDriver commands in any programming language can be found at http://docs.seleniumhq.org/docs/.

The preceding example is slightly oversimplified. The action commands are written in the same format from programming language to programming language. However, writing code in different kinds of languages, such as compiled VS interpreted, will have their own idioms and best practices. Some actions that work well in Ruby would be wasteful and counterintuitive in Java.