Reputation: 125
In previous questions I have seen that a nice way to wait for the url to change is to use:
browser.wait( function() {
return browser.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url) {
return /myURL/.test(url);
});
}, 10000, "url has not changed");`
But I am trying to have a method that I can pass myURL as a variable (in case I need to use it with other sites) and is not working.
I am trying this in my Page Object file:
this.waitUrl = function(myUrl) {
browser.wait( function(myUrl) {
return browser.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url, myUrl) {
return myUrl.test(url);
});
}, 10000, "url has not changed");
};
Any ideas if this is even possible and how to do it if so?
Upvotes: 11
Views: 11870
Reputation: 1048
For those that want an example for Protractor 4.0.0 through 5.3.0
You can use "ExpectedConditions" like so...
var expectedCondition = protractor.ExpectedConditions;
// Waits for the URL to contain 'login page'.
browser.wait(expectedCondition.urlContains('app/pages/login'), 5000);
If you want to validate this with an e2e test.
it('should go to login page', function() {
loginPage.login();
const EC = protractor.ExpectedConditions;
browser.wait(EC.urlContains('app/pages/login'), 5000).then(function(result) {
expect(result).toEqual(true);
});
});
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 473833
Update (July 2016): with Protractor 4.0.0 you can solve it with urlIs
and urlContains
built-in Expected Conditions.
Original answer:
Don't pass myUrl
inside the then
function, it is available from the page object function scope:
browser.wait(function() {
return browser.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url) {
return myUrl.test(url);
});
}, 10000, "url has not changed");
I would though define it as an Expected Condition:
function waitUrl (myUrl) {
return function () {
return browser.getCurrentUrl().then(function(url) {
return myUrl.test(url);
});
}
}
So that you can then use it this way:
browser.wait(waitUrl(/my\.url/), 5000);
Upvotes: 12