In essence, I have a situation where when the user types in to an HTML text input, an element is dynamically added to a the page. No network activity is involved in adding the element.
I want to run my tests -that include checking this behaviour -on as wide a variety of browsers as possible and will use a cloud service e.g. saucelabs.com.
I'd like to test that the number of dynamically added elements is correct. My test so far:
text_input.send_keys('a')
#send_keys('a') should make the browser immediately add an li to ul.new-elements
added_elements = browser.find_elements_by_css_selector('ul.new-elements li')
assert(len(added_elements), expected_num_of_list_items)
This is working reliably on my local machine, but from what I can see it assumes that the browser will always complete the DOM manipulation before Python/Webdriver gets to the find_elements_by_
call. Am I right in thinking this a dangerous assumption?
If so, do I need an explicit wait? Perhaps something like:
text_input.send_keys('a')
try:
WebDriverWait(browser, 30).until(
lambda b: len(b.find_elements_by_css_selector('ul.new-elements li')) == expected_num_of_list_items,
'Timed out waiting for LI to be added.'
)
except TimeoutException:
fail('Timed out waiting for LI to be added.') #2 fail messages?
(My understanding is that implicit_wait
is not relevant here).