There are two aspects to consider regarding code reuse:
- Eliminating code duplication in your own code base -- c_maker touched on this.
- Eliminating code duplication from code generated by Selenium IDE.
I should point out that my comments lean heavily to the one-way workflow that you are using, jcollum, but even more so: I use IDE to generate code just once for a given test case. I never go back to the IDE to modify the test case and re-export it. (I do keep the IDE test case around as a diagnostic tool when I want to experiment with things while I am fine-tuning and customizing my test case in code (in my case, C#).
The reasons I favor using IDE tests only as a starting point are:
- IDE tests will always have a lot of code duplication from one test to another; sometimes even within one test. That is just the nature of the beast.
- In code I can make the test case more "user-friendly", i.e. I can encapsulate arcane locators within a meaningful-named property or method so it is much clearer what the test case is doing.
- Working in code rather than the IDE just provides much greater flexibility.
So back to IDE-generated code: it always has massive amounts of duplication. Example:
verifyText "//form[@id='aspnetForm']/div[2]/div/div[2]/div[1]/span" Home
generates this block of code:
try
{
Assert.AreEqual("Home",
selenium.GetText("//form[@id='aspnetForm']/div[2]/div/div[2]/div[1]/span"));
}
catch (AssertionException e)
{
verificationErrors.Append(e.Message);
}
Each subsequent verifyText command generates an identical block of code, differing only by the two parameters.
My solution to this pungent code smell was to develop Selenium Sushi, a Visual Studio C# project template and library that lets you eliminate most if not all of this duplication. With the library I can simply write this one line of code to match the original line of code from the IDE test case:
Verify.AreEqual("Home",
selenium.GetText("//form[@id='aspnetForm']/div[2]/div/div[2]/div[1]/span"));
I have an extensive article covering this (Web Testing with Selenium Sushi: A Practical Guide and Toolset) that was just published on Simple-Talk.com in February, 2011.