Book Image

Drupal 10 Development Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Matt Glaman, Kevin Quillen
Book Image

Drupal 10 Development Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Matt Glaman, Kevin Quillen

Overview of this book

This new and improved third edition cookbook is packed with the latest Drupal 10 features such as a new, flexible default frontend theme - Olivero, and improved administrative experience with a new theme - Claro. This comprehensive recipe book provides updated content on the WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) editing experience, improved core code performance, and code cleanup. Drupal 10 Development Cookbook begins by helping you create and manage a Drupal site. Next, you’ll get acquainted with configuring the content structure and editing content. You’ll also get to grips with all new updates of this edition, such as creating custom pages, accessing and working with entities, running and writing tests with Drupal, migrating external data into Drupal, and turning Drupal into an API platform. As you advance, you’ll learn how to customize Drupal’s features with out-of-the-box modules, contribute extensions, and write custom code to extend Drupal. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to create and manage Drupal sites, customize them to your requirements, and build custom code to deliver your projects.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Writing a functional JavaScript test

Assume that you now have one last request. You have been asked to use AJAX to display the value from the Camel Case formatter 3 seconds after a user has visited a page.

Testing this requires using an actual browser such as Google Chrome. Checking anything that involves AJAX, cookies, user interactions, or the DOM cannot be done with a regular functional test.

Fortunately, writing a functional JavaScript test is not all that different; we just extend from a different base class for the test – WebDriverTestBase instead of BrowserTestBase.

Chrome and Selenium required

If you use DDEV, Lando, Docksal, or other ready made tools to run Drupal locally, check their documentation on how to best integrate Chrome and Selenium for functional JavaScript tests. They all have variations in approach to installing them.

How to do it…

In your tests/src directory, create a new directory named FunctionalJavascript. Within that new directory...