Extensibility
Custom selector engines
Playwright supports custom selector engines, registered with selectors.register(name, script[, options]).
Selector engine should have the following properties:
create
function to create a relative selector fromroot
(root is either aDocument
,ShadowRoot
orElement
) to atarget
element.query
function to query first element matchingselector
relative to theroot
.queryAll
function to query all elements matchingselector
relative to theroot
.
By default the engine is run directly in the frame’s JavaScript context and, for example, can call an application-defined function. To isolate the engine from any JavaScript in the frame, but leave access to the DOM, register the engine with {contentScript: true}
option. Content script engine is safer because it is protected from any tampering with the global objects, for example altering Node.prototype
methods. All built-in selector engines run as content scripts. Note that running as a content script is not guaranteed when the engine is used together with other custom engines.
An example of registering selector engine that queries elements based on a tag name:
// Must be a function that evaluates to a selector engine instance.
const createTagNameEngine = () => ({
// Creates a selector that matches given target when queried at the root.
// Can return undefined if unable to create one.
create(root, target) {
return root.querySelector(target.tagName) === target ? target.tagName : undefined;
},
// Returns the first element matching given selector in the root's subtree.
query(root, selector) {
return root.querySelector(selector);
},
// Returns all elements matching given selector in the root's subtree.
queryAll(root, selector) {
return Array.from(root.querySelectorAll(selector));
}
});
// Register the engine. Selectors will be prefixed with "tag=".
await selectors.register('tag', createTagNameEngine);
// Now we can use 'tag=' selectors.
const button = await page.$('tag=button');
// We can combine it with other selector engines using `>>` combinator.
await page.click('tag=div >> span >> "Click me"');
// We can use it in any methods supporting selectors.
const buttonCount = await page.$$eval('tag=button', buttons => buttons.length);