Book Image

Enhanced Test Automation with WebdriverIO

By : Paul M. Grossman, Larry C. Goddard
Book Image

Enhanced Test Automation with WebdriverIO

By: Paul M. Grossman, Larry C. Goddard

Overview of this book

This book helps you embark on a comprehensive journey to master the art of WebdriverIO automation, from installation through to advanced framework development. You’ll start by following step-by-step instructions on installing WebdriverIO, configuring Node packages, and creating a simple test. Here you’ll gain an understanding of the mechanics while also learning to add reporting and screen captures to your test results to enhance your test case documentation. In the next set of chapters, you’ll delve into the intricacies of configuring and developing robust method wrappers, a crucial skill for supporting multiple test suites. The book goes beyond the basics, exploring testing techniques tailored for Jenkins as well as LambdaTest cloud environments. As you progress, you’ll gain a deep understanding of both TypeScript and JavaScript languages and acquire versatile coding skills. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed the expertise to construct a sophisticated test automation framework capable of executing an entire suite of tests using WebdriverIO in either TypeScript or JavaScript, as well as excel in your test automation endeavors and deliver reliable, efficient testing solutions.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
16
Epilogue
Appendix: The Ultimate Guide to TypeScript Error Messages, Causes, and Solutions

Coal into diamonds – replacing dynamic data tags

A very common task in test automation is to populate a field with the current date. Now, we don’t want to be changing the date every single day manually, so we want something dynamic that provides us with that functionality. If we’re clever, that functionality can return the current, past, or future date. Even the date format could be modified. This is where the techniques of embedded dynamic data tags come into play.

Dynamic data tags are a way to keep data that changes at a regular cadence fresh. It might be the current day of the week, a unique order number that was created by a batch job that needs completion, or a future business date excluding weekends and holidays.

There are many applications that will be unique to each individual project. In this case, we will provide a simple example of the most common data replacement – replacing a tag name, "Today is: <today>", with the current...