5

I'm using Cucumber to test a comment form that doesn't have a submit button. I found that selenium has a method called send_key, which in theory should allow me to do this:

find_field('my-field').native.send_key(:enter)

But when I run my test, I get:

undefined method `send_key' for #<Nokogiri::XML::Element:0x007f874b361828> (NoMethodError)

Not a clue what I'm doing wrong. Any ideas?

2
  • I think you have a typo: find_field('my-field').native.send_keys(:enter)
    – RobertH
    Feb 14, 2013 at 19:44
  • send_key is an alias for send_keys. Neither of them are recognized. Feb 14, 2013 at 20:36

3 Answers 3

3

You have to use the Selenium driver and not the :rack_test driver in Capybara to access the send_keys method:

  • Install the gem selenium-webdriver and add it to your gem file if you are using bundler.
  • Mark your test using :js => true so that it runs with the Selenium driver.

You get an error because by default, Capybara uses the :rack_test driver. Calling native on an element access the driver specific methods. :rack_test driver elements are implemented natively as Nokogiri::XML::Element, therefore the send_keys methods do not exists and you get this error.

0

Try with xpath

within(:xpath, "//form[@id='the_form']") do
  locate(:xpath, "//input[@name='the_input']").set(value)
  locate(:xpath, "//input[@name='the_input']").node.send_keys(:return)
end
0

You could also have a hidden button. Capybara can see it and click it.

<%= form.submit "OK", style: "display: none;" %>

Then in your test:

Capybara.ignore_hidden_elements = false
click_on "OK"

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