Selenium-python but lighter: Helium
Selenium-python is great for web automation. Helium makes it easier to use. For example:
Under the hood, Helium forwards each call to Selenium. The difference is that Helium's API is much more high-level. In Selenium, you need to use HTML IDs, XPaths and CSS selectors to identify web page elements. Helium on the other hand lets you refer to elements by user-visible labels. As a result, Helium scripts are typically 30-50% shorter than similar Selenium scripts. What's more, they are easier to read and more stable with respect to changes in the underlying web page.
Because Helium is simply a wrapper around Selenium, you can freely mix the two libraries. For example:
# A Helium function:
driver = start_chrome()
# A Selenium API:
driver.execute_script("alert('Hi!');")
So in other words, you don't lose anything by using Helium over pure Selenium.
In addition to its more high-level API, Helium simplifies further tasks that are traditionally painful in Selenium:
- Web driver management: Helium ships with its own copies of geckodriver and automatically downloads a matching ChromeDriver for your system, so you don't need to manually download and put them on your PATH.
- iFrames: Unlike Selenium, Helium lets you interact with elements inside nested iFrames, without having to first "switch to" the iFrame.
- Window management. Helium notices when popups open or close and focuses / defocuses them like a user would. You can also easily switch to a window by (parts of) its title. No more having to iterate over Selenium window handles.
- Implicit waits. By default, if you try click on an element with Selenium and that element is not yet present on the page, your script fails. Helium by default waits up to 10 seconds for the element to appear.
- Explicit waits. Helium gives you a much nicer API for waiting for a
condition on the web page to become true. For example: To wait for an element
to appear in Selenium, you would write:
With Helium, you can write:
element = WebDriverWait(driver, 10).until( EC.presence_of_element_located((By.ID, "myDynamicElement")) )
wait_until(Button('Download').exists)
Installation
To get started with Helium, you need Python 3 and Chrome or Firefox.
If you already know Python, then the following command should be all you need:
pip install helium
Otherwise - Hi! I would recommend you create a virtual environment in the current directory. Any libraries you download (such as Helium) will be placed there. Enter the following into a command prompt:
python3 -m venv venv
This creates a virtual environment in the venv
directory. To activate it:
# On Mac/Linux:
source venv/bin/activate
# On Windows:
call venv\scripts\activate.bat
Then, install Helium using pip
:
python -m pip install helium
Now enter python
into the command prompt and (for instance) the commands in
the animation at the top of this page (from helium import *
, ...).
Your first script
I've compiled a cheatsheet that quickly teaches you all you need to know to be productive with Helium.
API Documentation
The documentation for this project can be found here.
Status of this project
I have too little spare time to maintain this project for free. If you'd like my help, please go to my web site to ask about my consulting rates. Otherwise, unless it is very easy for me, I will usually not respond to emails or issues on the issue tracker. I will however accept and merge PRs. So if you add some functionality to Helium that may be useful for others, do share it with us by creating a Pull Request. For instructions, please see Contributing below.
How you can help
I find Helium extremely useful in my own projects and feel it should be more widely known. Here's how you can help with this:
- Star this project on GitHub.
- Tell your friends and colleagues about it.
- Share it on Twitter with one click
- Share it on other social media
- Write a blog post about Helium.
With this, I think we can eventually make Helium the de-facto standard for web automation in Python.
Contributing
Pull Requests are very welcome. Please follow the same coding conventions as the rest of the code, in particular the use of tabs over spaces. Also, read through my PR guidelines. Doing this will save you (and me) unnecessary effort.
Before you submit a PR, ensure that the tests still work:
pip install -Ur requirements/test.txt
python setup.py test
This runs the tests against Chrome. To run them against Firefox, set the
environment variable TEST_BROWSER
to firefox
. Eg. on Mac/Linux:
TEST_BROWSER=firefox python setup.py test
On Windows:
set TEST_BROWSER=firefox
python setup.py test
If you do add new functionality, you should also add tests for it. Please see
the tests/
directory for what this might look like.
History
I (Michael Herrmann) originally developed Helium in 2013 for a Polish IT startup called BugFree software. (It could be that you have seen Helium before at https://heliumhq.com.) We shut down the company at the end of 2019 and I felt it would be a shame if Helium simply disappeared from the face of the earth. So I invested some time to modernize it and bring it into a state suitable for open source.
Helium used to be available for both Java and Python. But because I now only use it from Python, I didn't have time to bring the Java implementation up to speed as well. Similarly for Internet Explorer: Helium used to support it, but since I have no need for it, I removed the (probably broken) old implementation.