Reputation: 147
I'd like to check whether the user can see an element in the current web browser view without scrolling.
What I've found can check whether the element is somewhere on the page.
Another hint suggested to check the elements position but then I would need to get the dimensions of the visible window of the browser plus its x/y offset to 0/0.
I would be grateful if someone could point me to a solution that does not need JavaScript code.
Upvotes: 9
Views: 11495
Reputation: 25056
How do you define 'visible to the user'? How do you propose to check it? If it has a height? If it isn't hidden by CSS? What if it's parent element is hidden by CSS?
The most reliable way will be to use Selenium's built in .Displayed
property (if you are using C#, Java has something similiar), and combine it with jQuery's 'visible' selector: http://api.jquery.com/visible-selector/. Example below, in C#.
var element = Driver.FindElement(By.Id("test"));
bool isVisible = element.Displayed;
var javascriptCapableDriver = (IJavascriptExecutor)Driver;
bool jQueryBelivesElementIsVisible = javascriptCapableDriver.ExecuteScript("return $('#myElement').is(:visible);");
bool elementIsVisible = isVisible && jQueryBelievesElementIsVisible;
This will get the majority of cases.
It isn't possible without client side code, or in the preparation that someone else finds a way that it can be done in a server side language, I highly doubt it will be pretty, readable or reliable.
jQuery has the offset()
method:
This, however, won't work when taking into account borders, margins, that kind of stuff.
Upvotes: 2