/cypress-page-object

Represent the screens of your website as a series of objects in your Cypress test suite

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Cypress Page Object

Represent the screens of your website as a series of objects in your Cypress test suite. This library addon eases the construction of these objects for your acceptance/integration/end to end tests.

Table of content

Quick Start

Install the library using npm

$ npm install --save-dev cypress-page-object

After installing the library you can create a page object inside your project.

Let's assume the website you want to test has a http://example.com/login.html page, we can test a failed login. Create a new integration and define a page object as follows.

import { page, visitable, fillable, clickable } from "cypress-page-object";

const loginPage = page({
  visit: visitable('/login'),
  fillUsername: fillable('#username'),
  fillPassword: fillable('#password'),
  submit: clickable('[type="submit"]'),

  errorMessage() {
    return cy.get('.error-message');
  }
});

context('My Awesome WebSite', () => {

  it('logs into the website', () => {
    loginPage
      .visit()
      .fillUsername('john@example.com')
      .fillPassword('wrong password')
      .submit()
      .errorMessage()
      .should('contain', 'Wrong username and password');
  });

});

As you can see, by having a page object we extract away the CSS selectors from the test making it more readable.

What is a Page Object?

An excerpt from the Selenium Wiki

Within your web app's UI there are areas that your tests interact with. A Page Object simply models these as objects within the test code. This reduces the amount of duplicated code and means that if the UI changes, the fix need only be applied in one place.

The pattern was first introduced by the Selenium

You can find more information about this design pattern here:

API

page

Creates a new page object. The new page object contains some utilities to make your tests a bit more DRY and easier to read.

Example

import { page, visitable, fillable, clickable } from "cypress-page-object";

const loginPage = page({
  visit: visitable('/login'),
  fillUsername: fillable('#username'),
  fillPassword: fillable('#password'),
  submit: clickable('[type="submit"]'),

  errorMessage() {
    return cy.get('.error-message');
  }
});

context('My Awesome WebSite', () => {

  it('logs into the website', () => {
    loginPage
      .visit()
      .fillUsername('john@example.com')
      .fillPassword('wrong password')
      .submit()
      .errorMessage()
      .should('contain', 'Wrong username and password');
  });

});

You can add any property to your page object and they will be accessible from your tests.

import { page } from "cypress-page-object";

const loginPage = page({});

loginPage.should('contain', 'My text');

clickable

Clicks a button or input

Example

import { page, clickable } from "cypress-page-object";

const login = page({
  submit: clickable('button[type="submit"]')
});

login.submit();
Parameter Type Description
selector string CSS selector of the element to click

fillable

Fills an input with text

Example

import { page, fillable } from "cypress-page-object";

const login = page({
  username: fillable('input#username')
  password: fillable('input#password')
});

login
  .username("john@doe.com")
  .password("secret");
Parameter Type Description
selector string CSS selector of the input element
options object Additional options
options.isHidden boolean True to force write hidden inputs

visitable

Loads a page

Example

import { page, visitable } from "cypress-page-object";

const login = page({
  visit: visitable('/login')
});

login.visit();
cy.url().should('include', '/form')
Parameter Type Description
path string Full path of the page to load

Development

TBA

License

cypress-page-object is licensed under the MIT license.

See LICENSE for the full license text.