Below in my code
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.id("file")));
Above line is not running
There is various way to switch to frame. Please share the HTML code if you need a exact code to switch to your respective application. you can try with below method. Better use index if your frame do not any name etc
driver.switchTo().frame(index)
replace index with 0 first and if it not work then try with 1 and then 2 etc one by one
More details
driver.switchTo().frame() has multiple overloads.
driver.switchTo().frame(name or id)
Here your iframe doesn't have id or name, so not for you.
driver.switchTo().frame(index)
This is the last option to choose, because using index is not stable enough as you could imagine. If this is your only iframe in the page, try
driver.switchTo().frame(0)
driver.switchTo().frame(iframe_element)
The most common one. You locate your iframe like other elements, then pass it into the method.
Here locating it by title attributes seems to be the best.
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("iframe[title='Fill Quote']")));
// driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.xpath(".//iframe[#title='Fill Quote']")));
most probably, your iframe is not visible or your window is not active.
in Python:
driver.switch_to_default_content()
wait.until(EC.frame_to_be_available_and_switch_to_it("yourFrame"))
in Java:
driver.switchTo().defaultContent();
wait.until(ExpectedConditions.frameToBeAvailableAndSwitchToIt(By.tagName("yourFrame")));
Related
I am not able locate a webelement, this web application opens in Internet explorer only and I have used all the possible ways to click but no luck.
Xpath locators that I have tried :
"//form[#id='Form1']//a[contains(text(),'Age Range')]"
and
"//form[#id='Form1']//a[#id='rptTables1_ctl07_hlTablename1']"
also I have tried click on the element using action class and javascript as well.
Attached DOM in the URL, please have a look here
In the node a, id value is not static so you can't locate that element using the id value but you can use partial id value for example, looks like rptTables1_ is unique in id value and the remaining part is changing so applying contains() on this may works.
Try the below xpath if there is only match :
//a[contains(#id, 'rptTables1_')]
Try the below xpath by providing the matching index if there are multiple xpath matches :
(//a[contains(#id, 'rptTables1_')])[Matching index number]
for example if the matching index is 3 then you can write like this (//a[contains(#id, 'rptTables1_')])[3].
Or you can use the Advanced Performance Parameters Panel Topics text to identify that element.
//a[contains(text(), 'Advanced Performance Parameters Panel Topics')]
Again if there are multiple matches then try to use indexing method as mentioned above.
Or you can try the below modified your xpaths :
//form[#id='Form1']//a[contains(#id, 'rptTables1_')]
or
(//form[#id='Form1']//a[contains(#id, 'rptTables1_')])[Matching index number]
or
//form[#id='Form1']//a[contains(text(), 'Advanced Performance Parameters Panel Topics')]
I hope it helps...
I haven't tried any automation in IE at all but in firefox, sometimes I encounter those issues and my work around other than the .click() function is send_keys(Keys.RETURN). Also, i'm using time.sleep(x) before clicking or sending keys to make sure the element has been loaded.
i'm in day 2 of my selenium class, need help in finding an efficient way of looping over elements and if matches click the link address.
I want to navigate from classFrame to navList and loop over to find the match and click.
public void switchFrames() {
driver.navigate().to("https://seleniumhq.github.io/selenium/docs/api/java/");
driver.switchTo().frame("classFrame");
/* List<WebElement> elements = driver.findElements(By.className("navList"));
for (WebElement element : elements) {
System.out.println(element.findElement(By.xpath(".//li/a")).getText());
}
*/
List<WebElement> items = driver.findElements(By.cssSelector("ul li"));
if ( items.size() > 0 ) {
for ( WebElement we: items ) {
we.findElement(By.linkText("Deprecated")).click();
}
}
driver.findElement(By.linkText("Deprecated")).click();
driver.close();
}
The main part you are missing and the reason you can't find the element you are looking for is because it's in a frame. In order to access elements in a frame with Selenium, you need to switch the driver context to the frame. You do that using driver.switchTo().frame(). Once you are done interacting with the frame, switch back to the default context using driver.switchTo().defaultContent().
Having said that... let me offer you some more advice since you are just starting out. There are several ways to do this. One way is like what you attempted... grab an element, find a child, loop through those children looking for the link you want. I prefer the more direct approach since we can search for the exact link using an XPath. What you want to do is to click the DEPRECATED link on the navbar. You could just use the By.linkText() locator and that will work but you want to be careful, especially with a page like this that has so many links, to not click on a link you didn't intend to. The way you do that is to narrow the search to the specific area you expect the link to be in, the navbar. Once you narrow the search there, you can quickly and safely find the link you are looking for. I prefer to do it in a single search using an XPath but you could use say a CSS selector to find the navbar area and then use By.linkText() to find the link, e.g.
driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("ul[title='Navigation']").findElement(By.linkText("Deprecated").click();
In that case, you will be scraping the page twice. It's not likely a big performance hit, I just prefer to use a single locator when it makes sense. I would suggest that since you are likely to use this code over and over that you put it in a function and pass it the link name, e.g.
public void clickNavbar(String linkName)
{
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("frame[name='classFrame']")));
driver.findElement(By.xpath("//ul[#title='Navigation']//a[.='" + linkName + "']")).click();
driver.switchTo().defaultContent();
}
Then you can call it like, clickNavbar("Deprecated");
http://i.stack.imgur.com/L4WUv.jpg
Link to Grid
I'm trying to detect the different drop downs on this page (depicted by the filters by the text boxes). The problem i'm having is that it seems that the filters all have the same ids. I can get the webdriver to find the initial filter button but not target the options in the drop down.
Note the filters I'm talking about are the ones from the funnel buttons. For example contains, isEqual, between etc *
This is wrong but an example
it('Should filter grid to -contain Civic', function() {
browser.element(by.id('ctl00_ContentPlaceHolder1_RadGrid1_ctl00_ctl02_ctl03_FilterTextBox_Model')).sendKeys("civic");
browser.element(by.id('ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder1$RadGrid1$ctl00$ctl02$ctl03$FilterTextBox_Model')).click();
browser.element(by.xpath("//*[contains(text(), 'Contains')]")).click();
})
NOTE The answer that was being looked for is at the bottom of this answer after the word "EDIT". The rest of this answer is retained because it is still useful.
It's a challenge to test webpages that dynamically generate ids and other attributes. Sometimes you just have to figure out how to navigate the stable attributes with an xpath. Here's an xpath that finds all four dropdowns:
//tr[#class='rgFilterRow']//input
To differentiate between each one, you can do this:
(//tr[#class='rgFilterRow']//input)[1] // Brand Name
(//tr[#class='rgFilterRow']//input)[2] // Classification
(//tr[#class='rgFilterRow']//input)[3] // Transmission
(//tr[#class='rgFilterRow']//input)[4] // Fuel
Using numbers to specify elements in an xpath isn't really desirable (it will behave incorrectly if the order of columns in the table changes), but it's probably the best you can do in this case because of all the dynamic ids and general lack of reliable identifying attributes.
EDIT
I misunderstood what you were trying to get because I didn't look at the image that you linked to. Once you've opened up that menu, you should be able to use an xpath to get whichever option you want by the text. For example, if you want the "Contains" option:
//a[#class='rmLink']//span[text()='Contains']
This page is highly dynamic. You had better brush up on your XPath, as nothing else will be able to help you. You can use this: http://www.zvon.org/xxl/XPathTutorial/General/examples.html .
Here is a simple example of how to access the Brand Name "pulldown". This is written in Groovy, which looks a lot like Java. If you know Java you should be able to get the idea from this:
WebElement brandName = driver.findElement(By.id("ctl00_ContentPlaceHolder1_RadGrid1_ctl00_ctl02_ctl03_BrandNameCombo_Arrow"))
brandName.click() // to open the "pulldown"
List<WebElement> brandItems = driver.findElements(By.xpath("//ul[#class='rcbList']/li"))
brandItems.each {
if(it.text == 'BMW')
it.click()
}
Unfortunately, the above id is not very reliable. A much better strategy would be something like:
WebElement classification = driver.findElement(By.xpath("//table[#summary='combobox']//a[contains(#id, 'ClassificationCombo_Arrow')]"))
Selecting its items is done similarly.
classification.click() // to open the "pulldown"
List<WebElement> classificationItems = driver.findElements(By.xpath("//ul[#class='rcbList']/li"))
classificationItems.each {
if(it.text == 'Sedan')
it.click()
}
If you are not up to the task, you should be able to get help from your development colleagues on how to locate all the elements in this page.
Can anyone tell me how I can identify and switch to the iframe which has only a title?
<iframe frameborder="0" style="border: 0px none; width: 100%; height: 356px; min-width: 0px; min-height: 0px; overflow: auto;" dojoattachpoint="frame" title="Fill Quote" src="https://tssstrpms501.corp.trelleborg.com:12001/teamworks/process.lsw?zWorkflowState=1&zTaskId=4581&zResetContext=true&coachDebugTrace=none">
I have tried by below code but it is not working
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.tagName("iframe")));
driver.switchTo().frame() has multiple overloads.
driver.switchTo().frame(name_or_id)
Here your iframe doesn't have id or name, so not for you.
driver.switchTo().frame(index)
This is the last option to choose, because using index is not stable enough as you could imagine. If this is your only iframe in the page, try driver.switchTo().frame(0)
driver.switchTo().frame(iframe_element)
The most common one. You locate your iframe like other elements, then pass it into the method.
Here locating it by title attributes seems to be the best.
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("iframe[title='Fill Quote']")));
// driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.xpath(".//iframe[#title='Fill Quote']")));
you can use cssSelector,
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("iframe[title='Fill Quote']")));
You also can use src to switch to frame, here is what you can use:
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.xpath(".//iframe[#src='https://tssstrpms501.corp.trelleborg.com:12001/teamworks/process.lsw?zWorkflowState=1&zTaskId=4581&zResetContext=true&coachDebugTrace=none']")));
Make sure you switch to default content before switching to frame:
driver.switchTo().defaultContent();
driver.switchTo().frame(x);
x can be the frame number or you can do a driver.findlement and use any of the options you have available eg: driver.findElementByName("Name").
1) goto html view
2) type iframe and find your required frame and count the value and switch to it using
oASelFW.driver.switchTo().frame(2);
if it is first frame then use oASelFW.driver.switchTo().frame(0);
if it is second frame then use oASelFW.driver.switchTo().frame(1); respectively
You can use Css Selector or Xpath:
Approach 1 : CSS Selector
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.cssSelector("iframe[title='Fill Quote']")));
Approach 2 : Xpath
driver.switchTo().frame(driver.findElement(By.xpath("//iframe[#title='Fill Quote']")));
https://seleniumatfingertips.wordpress.com/2016/07/05/handling-frames-in-selenium-webdriver-with-java/
Easiest way of doing this is like this. If its a frame you can right click on the field and if you see the choice of "open frame in a tab" do it.
Then take the URL of the frame and that is what you put in your Python script using "driver.get (http://blah blah..)
Then Selenium can find your named element. This saved me hours of trying all the suggestions here which was learning about but didn't work. Problem with mine was it was in a frame.
I'm using Linux which gives me the right-click option of opening the frame, on its own, in another tab. I don't use Windows so don't know if you would get that option in you right-click menu.
Ganzarola
I struggled with this for a while; a particularly frustrating website had several nested frames throughout the site. I couldn't find any way to identify the frames- no name, id, xpath, css selector- nothing.
Eventually I realised that frames are numbered with the top level being frame(0) the second frame(1) etc.
As I still didn't know which frame the element I needed was sitting in, I wrote a for loop to start from 0 and cycle to 50 continually moving to the next frame and attempting to access my required element; if it failed I got it to print a message and continue.
Spent too much time on this problem for such a simple solution -_-
driver.switch_to.default_content()
for x in range(50):
try:
driver.switch_to.frame(x)
driver.find_element_by_xpath("//*[#id='23']").click()
driver.find_element_by_xpath("/html/body/form/table/tbody/tr[1]/td/ul/li[49]/a").click()
except:
print("It's not: ", x)
continue
There are three ways to switch to the frame
1)Can use id
2)Can use name of the frame
3)Can use WebElement of the frame
2->driver.switchTo().frame("name of the frame");
I think I can add something here.
Situation I faced
I cannot or not easily use the debug tools or inspection tools like firebug to see which frame I am currently at and want to go to.
The XPATH/CSS selector etc. that the inspection tool told me doesn't work since the current frame is not the target one. e.g. I need to first switch to a sub-frame to be able to access/locate the element from XPATH or any other reference.
In short, the find_element() or find_elements() method doesn't apply in my case.
Wait Wait! not exactly
unless we use some fazzy search method.
use find_elements() with contains(#id,"frame") to filter out the potential frames.
e.g.
driver.find_elements(By.XPATH,'//*[contains(#id,"frame")]')
Then use switchTo() to switch to that frame and hopefully the underlying XPATH for your target element can be accessed this time.
If you're similar unlucky like me, iteration might need to be done for the found frames and even iterate deeper in more layers.
e.g.
This is the piece I use.
try:
elf1 = mydriver.find_elements(By.XPATH,'//*[contains(#id,"rame")]')
mydriver.switch_to_frame(elf1[1])
elf2 = mydriver.find_elements(By.XPATH,'//*[contains(#id,"rame")]')
mydriver.switch_to_frame(elf2[2])
len(mydriver.page_source) ## size of source tell whether I am in the right frame
I try out different switch_to_frame(elf1[x])/switch_to_frame(elf2[x]) combinations and finally found the wanted element by the XPATH I found from the inspection tool in browser.
try:
element = WebDriverWait(mydriver, 10).until(
EC.presence_of_element_located((By.XPATH, '//*[#id="C4_W16_V17_ZSRV-HOME"]'))
)
#Click the link
element.click()
I could solve that with the following code
browser.switch_to.frame(browser.find_element_by_tag_name('iframe'))
I am getting different results for the same locator. For example
//table[#id='foo']
returns true when testing ElementPresent, but returns 0 for XpathCount. In Selenium v1.0.10 IDE the Find button highlights the correct element for both functions. Any ideas on what could be causing this?
Notes:
We have frames on the page EDIT: This is probably the problem. Bounty to verification.
There are many tables on the page, but only one with #id of "foo"
Firefox 3.6
Happens in both IDE and Java RC
Well, this is not a verification more of a non-verification.
I use Selenium to test a GUI with frames. To make isElementPresent and getXpathCount to work I always have to select a frame first with selectFrame (even to get isElementPresent to work correctly). By just opening an URL no frame at all seems to be selected.
This is what the HTML and corresponding selectFrame code looks like:
<frameset id="mainframeset"><frame name="nav" id="nav" src....
selenium.selectFrame("nav");
Use these XPath expressions:
boolean(//table[#id='foo'])
and
count(//table[#id='foo'])
In case there is a table element whose id attribute's value is "foo", then the first expression above should evalute to true() and the second expression above should evalute to a positive integer.
Not really a direct answer to the question, but a workaround if you are reading this and want to loop over the elements. Use isElementPresent in the for loop like this:
for(int i = 2; selenium.isElementPresent("//table[#id='foo']//tr["+i+"]"); i++)
{
selenium.getText("//table[#id='foo']//tr["+i+"]//td["+columnNum+"]");
}
Note that we start i at 2 since XPath is indexed from 1 and we want to skip the header