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Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing

You're reading from   Selenium Framework Design in Data-Driven Testing Build data-driven test frameworks using Selenium WebDriver, AppiumDriver, Java, and TestNG

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788473576
Length 354 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Carl Cocchiaro Carl Cocchiaro
Author Profile Icon Carl Cocchiaro
Carl Cocchiaro
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Scalable Selenium Test Driver Class for Web and Mobile Applications FREE CHAPTER 2. Selenium Framework Utility Classes 3. Best Practices for Building Selenium Page Object Classes 4. Defining WebDriver and AppiumDriver Page Object Elements 5. Building a JSON Data Provider 6. Developing Data-Driven Test Classes 7. Encapsulating Data in Data-Driven Testing 8. Designing a Selenium Grid 9. Third-Party Tools and Plugins 10. Working Selenium WebDriver Framework Samples

Calling page object methods in test classes


One of the most common mistakes users make when building automated tests is to build low-level event processing into their test class methods. We have been using the Selenium POM in this framework design, and what that means for the test classes is that you want to call the page object methods from within the test class methods, but not access the WebElements themselves. The goal is to reduce the amount of code being written and create a "library" of common methods that can be called in many places!

Now, what can be done in the framework to restrict users from going off track?

Users can set the scope of all WebElements defined in the page object classes to protected. That allows subclasses to access them, but prevents users from accessing the WebElements directly in the test methods, after instantiating the class.

Getter/setter methods can be built in the page object classes for cases where the user needs to get the WebElement to clean up a test ...

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