Book Image

Learn Selenium

By : UNMESH GUNDECHA, Carl Cocchiaro
Book Image

Learn Selenium

By: UNMESH GUNDECHA, Carl Cocchiaro

Overview of this book

Selenium WebDriver 3.x is an open source API for testing both browser and mobile applications. With the help of this book, you can build a solid foundation and learn to easily perform end-to-end testing on web and mobile browsers. You'll begin by focusing on the Selenium Page Object Model for software development. You'll architect your own framework with a scalable driver class, Java utility classes, and support for third-party tools and plugins. Next, you'll design and build a Selenium Grid from scratch to enable the framework to scale and support different browsers, mobile devices, and platforms. You'll also strategize and handle a rich web UI using the advanced WebDriver API, and learn techniques to tackle real-time challenges in WebDriver. Later chapters will guide you through performing different types of testing, such as cross-browser testing, load testing, and mobile testing. Finally, you will be introduced to data-driven testing, using TestNG to create your own automation framework. By the end of this Learning Path, you'll be able to design your own automation testing framework and perform data-driven testing with Selenium WebDriver. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt books: • Selenium WebDriver 3 Practical Guide - Second Edition by Unmesh Gundecha • Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing by Carl Cocchiaro
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Title Page

Understanding WebDriver Events

Selenium WebDriver provides an API for tracking the various events that happen when test scripts are executed using WebDriver. Many navigation events get fired before and after a WebDriver internal event occurs (such as before and after navigating to a URL, and before and after browser back-navigation) and these can be tracked and captured. To throw an event, WebDriver gives you a class named EventFiringWebDriver, and to catch that event, it provides the test-script developer with an interface named WebDriverEventListener. The test-script developer should provide its own implementations for the overridden methods from the interface. In this chapter, we will look at the following topics:

  • How to listen to and handle various browser-navigation events by using EventFiringWebDriver
  • How to listen to and handle web-element action events that get triggered...