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Testing ​

Page object best practice ​

  • Use data-testid selectors to locate your UI elements
  • Use an unambiguous name for your page object class
  • The page class should only contain methods for interacting with the HTML page or component
  • The page class should only contain properties and methods
  • Don't create an assertion on the page object level
  • A page object doesn't have to be an entire HTML page and can be a small component

Waits best practice ​

Avoiding hard waits in Playwright.

js
await page.waitFor(1000); // hard wait for 1000ms

Never use hard waits in production tests. However, you can use them for testing or debugging purposes. Replace them with playwright methods like waitForNavigation, waitForLoadState, waitForSelector.

Pages ​

Follow the PageObjects pattern for the suite template to encapsulate each internal page structure and responsibilities inside its highly cohesive class file. This allows you to define a new page object for each page as per your needs.

Don't confuse the page objects you create with actual pages in the application. Pages are a lightweight concept of a view, a set of cohesive elements living under a known browser location.

Page objects ​

Each page must contain a cohesive set of locators and actions.

Structure ​

Structure e2e-tests ​

|- page-objects # Set of pages for the applications |- tests # Set of tests |- utils # Predefined helpers and their factory functions

For a page object to be as readable as possible, you must follow the below structure:

js
import { expect, Locator, Page } from "@playwright/test";

export class LoginForm {
  // Define selectors
  readonly page: Page;
  readonly usernameInput: Locator;
  readonly passwordInput: Locator;
  readonly submitButton: Locator;
  readonly closeLoginPopup: Locator

  // Init selectors using constructor
  constructor(page: Page) {
    this.page = page;
    this.usernameInput = page.locator("[data-testid='login-email-input']");
    this.passwordInput = page.locator("[data-testid='login-password-input']");
    this.submitButton = page.locator("[data-testid='login-submit-button']");
    this.closeLoginPopup =page.locator('text=close')
  }

  // Define login page methods
  async login(username: string, password: string) {
    await this.usernameInput.type(username);
    await this.passwordInput.type(password);
    await this.submitButton.click();
  }
};

data-testid attribute ​

You are recommended to add the custom data attributes data-testid for:

  • Active elements (buttons, links, forms etc.)
  • Passive elements (essential elements like price, product options etc.)

The main benefit of adding those attributes is that you can easily get elements in E2E tests.

Naming convention ​

data-testid="{scope}-{name}-{type}"
data-testid="header-search-input"

Scope - indicates where the element is placed. For example - page Name - defines the element. For example - input name Type - indicates the type of element. For example - input

Usage in tests ​

js
import { test, expect } from "@playwright/test";

test("failed login", async ({ page }) => {
  await page.goto("/");

  await Promise.all([
    page.waitForNavigation(),
    page.click("[data-testid='header-sign-in-link']"),
  ]);

  await page
    .locator("[data-testid='login-email-input']")
    .fill("test@shopware.com");
  await page
    .locator("[data-testid='login-password-input']")
    .fill("Password123!@#");

  await Promise.all([await page.click("[data-testid='login-submit-button']")]);

  await expect(
    page.locator("data-testid='login-errors-container']"),
  ).toBeVisible();
});
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