Ancient question but,
Consider how WedDriverWait
works, in an example independent from selenium:
def is_even(n):
return n % 2 == 0
x = 10
WebDriverWait(x, 5).until(is_even)
This will wait up to 5 seconds for is_even(x)
to return True
now, WebDriverWait(7, 5).until(is_even)
will take 5 seconds and them raise a TimeoutException
Turns out, you can return any non Falsy value and capture it:
def return_if_even(n):
if n % 2 == 0:
return n
else:
return False
x = 10
y = WebDriverWait(x, 5).until(return_if_even)
print(y) # >> 10
Now consider how the methods of EC
works:
print(By.CSS_SELECTOR) # first note this is only a string
>> 'css selector'
cond = EC.presence_of_element_located( ('css selector', 'div.some_result') )
# this is only a function(*ish), and you can call it right away:
cond(driver)
# if element is in page, returns the element, raise an exception otherwise
You probably would want to try something like:
def presence_of_any_element_located(parent, *selectors):
ecs = []
for selector in selectors:
ecs.append(
EC.presence_of_element_located( ('css selector', selector) )
)
# Execute the 'EC' functions agains 'parent'
ecs = [ec(parent) for ec in ecs]
return any(ecs)
this WOULD work if EC.presence_of_element_located
returned False
when selector
not found in parent
, but it raises an exception, an easy-to-understand workaround would be:
def element_in_parent(parent, selector):
matches = parent.find_elements_by_css_selector(selector)
if len(matches) == 0:
return False
else:
return matches
def any_element_in_parent(parent, *selectors):
for selector in selectors:
matches = element_in_parent(parent, selector)
# if there is a match, return right away
if matches:
return matches
# If list was exhausted
return False
# let's try
any_element_in_parent(driver, 'div.some_result', 'div.no_result')
# if found in driver, will return matches, else, return False
# For convenience, let's make a version wich takes a tuple containing the arguments (either one works):
cond = lambda args: any_element_in_parent(*args)
cond( (driver, 'div.some_result', 'div.no_result') )
# exactly same result as above
# At last, wait up until 5 seconds for it
WebDriverWait((driver, 'div.some_result', 'div.no_result'), 5).until(cond)
My goal was to explain, artfulrobot already gave a snippet for general use of actual EC
methods, just note that
class A(object):
def __init__(...): pass
def __call__(...): pass
Is just a more flexible way to define functions (actually, a 'function-like', but that's irrelevant in this context)