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I have a page that has an image which when clicked shows a calendar. I've put an example of it here --> http://www.dotvibes.com/test/test.html Clicking on the image shows a calendar.

I tried to use Selenium IDE to record the action of clicking this image but it just does not work properly.

Here is what selenium IDE returns

<tr> click <td>//img[@name='calendarButton' and @onclick=&quot;return showCalendar('date_ceased0', 'dd/MM/yyyy');&quot;]</td> `

After clicking the image, selenium IDE does not record actual clicking of a date in the calendar. And also i cant type anything directly into the text box because for some reason it ends up being "undefined".

What do i need to do to test the image click, selecting a date including a different month? Please have a look at the example page shown above and try and record selecting a date using the IDE.

Thanks

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1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Selenium IDE doesn't record every action, so sometimes you need to play around with the commands available. The following works for me for selecting a date in your example:

click | name=calendarButton
mouseDown | css=tr.headrow td:nth-child(4)
waitForVisible | css=.combo .label:contains(Jan)
mouseOver | css=.combo .label:contains(Aug)
mouseUp | css=.combo .label:contains(Aug)
waitForNotVisible | css=.combo .label:contains(Jan)
mouseOver | css=.day:contains(10)
clickAt | css=.day:contains(10)
clickAt | css=.day:contains(10)
verifyValue | id=provisionDateP | 10/08/2010
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That looks interesting. What format/language is that? Can you post the html or java equivalent. Thanks – ziggy Feb 23 '10 at 9:49
I managed to type that onto the ide and converted it to Java and it works flawlessly. I wasnt aware that it was possible to access it using css like that and i wasnt aware of the clickAt event either. Thanks so much for your help. – ziggy Feb 23 '10 at 10:06
It's just a simple text format - a bit more readable than most of the formats. The CSS locators are very useful, normally faster than locating by XPath and often safer to use across browsers. Sometimes click doesn't work where clickAt does. I expect this is due to Selenium attempting to click the centre of the element, whereas clickAt without the final offset parameter will click the top left of the element. – Dave Hunt Feb 23 '10 at 10:39

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