Arguments
Use arguments to pass data to methods.
Argument Types
This table shows the syntax for declaring a non-literal argument with a name and type. Instead of using a combination of name and type, it's also possible to use a hardcoded (literal) value for an argument of these types.
| Name/type (non literal) | Value/type (literal) | |
|---|---|---|
| string primitive | { "name": "myArg", "type": "string" } | { "value": "myString" } |
| integer primitive | { "name": "myArg", "type": "number" } | { "value": 1024 } |
| boolean primitive | { "name": "myArg", "type": "boolean" } | { "value": false } |
| locator | { "name": "myArg", "type": "locator" } | { "value": { "css": ".myClass" }, "type": "locator" } |
| element reference | not supported | { "type": "elementReference", "value": "myElement" } |
| page object type | { "name": "myArg", "type": "pageObject" } | { "value": "my/page/object", "type": "pageObject" } |
| root page object type | { "name": "myArg", "type": "rootPageObject" } | { "value": "my/page/object", "type": "rootPageObject" } |
| frame element | { "name": "myArg", "type": "frame" } | same as element reference |
| function | not supported | { "type": "function", "predicate": [...] } |
Argument Reference
To access an argument passed to a compose method in multiple statements, declare a reusable argument at the method level. The args property must be a sibling of the name property.
For example, we declare a reusable passwordStr argument at the method level:
{
"name": "passwordStr",
"type": "string"
}
Then in each compose statement where you want to access the reusable argument, set the argument's type to argumentReference, the name of an argument with "type": "argumentReference" must match the name of one of the reusable arguments declared at the method level:
{
"name": "passwordStr",
"type": "argumentReference"
}
Here's the full method declaration. The statements that apply actions to the password and passwordConfirmation elements both declare a reference to the reusable passwordStr argument. When test code invokes this method, the passwordStr argument is passed to both statements:
{
"name": "confirmPassword",
"args": [
{
"name": "passwordStr",
"type": "string"
}
],
"compose": [
{
"element": "password",
"apply": "clearAndType",
"args": [
{
"name": "passwordStr",
"type": "argumentReference"
}
]
},
{
"element": "passwordConfirmation",
"apply": "clearAndType",
"args": [
{
"name": "passwordStr",
"type": "argumentReference"
}
]
}
]
}
A reusable argument can't be an argument with a hardcoded value, also known as a literal type.
For a working example of argument references, see this tutorial.
Element Reference Argument Type
The elementReference type in an argument allows you to reference an existing element as a parameter value. This example uses an elementReference to a targetElement element.
{
"elements": [
{
"name": "sourceElement",
"selector": {
"css": ".source"
},
"type": ["draggable"]
},
{
"name": "targetElement",
"selector": {
"css": ".source"
}
}
],
"methods": [
{
"name": "composeDragAndDrop",
"compose": [
{
"element": "sourceElement",
"apply": "dragAndDrop",
"args": [
{
"type": "elementReference",
"value": "targetElement"
}
]
}
]
}
]
}
Generated JavaScript code:
// declaration
composeDragAndDrop(): Promise<void>;
// implementation
async composeDragAndDrop() {
const _statement0 = await this.__getSourceElement();
await _statement0.dragAndDrop(await this.__getTargetElement());
}
If a referenced element has a selector or filter arguments, those values are automatically inferred and added to the method declaration.
{
"name": "target",
"selector": {
"css": "foo:nth-child(%d)",
"args": [
{
"name": "index",
"type": "number"
}
]
}
}
When the element is referenced in a compose statement, this page object hard codes the value of 1 for an index.
{
"element": "source",
"apply": "dragAndDrop",
"args": [
{
"value": "target",
"type": "elementReference",
"args": [
{
"value": 1
}
]
}
]
}