WebDriver click() vs JavaScript click().We can click a link with the webdriver click and Javascript click. For the Selenium webdriver click of a link we can use link text and partial link text locator. We can use the methods driver. findElement(By.
A click is the most fundamental user action performed by anyone accessing the internet. It allows the user to navigate web pages or perform particular tasks by interacting with links, buttons, and other web elements.
Action class'es click methods would perform the action but not wait for the action to be completed. WebElement's click method waits for the response to be completed before the next statement is executed. The wait for the action to complete is the only difference between the two.
Alternative of click() in Selenium We can use the JavaScript Executor to perform a click action. Selenium can execute JavaScript commands with the help of the executeScript method. The parameters – arguments[0]. click() and locator of the element on which the click is to be performed are passed to this method.
Contrarily to what the currently accepted answer suggests, there's nothing specific to PhantomJS when it comes to the difference between having WebDriver do a click and doing it in JavaScript.
The essential difference between the two methods is common to all browsers and can be explained pretty simply:
WebDriver: When WebDriver does the click, it attempts as best as it can to simulate what happens when a real user uses the browser. Suppose you have an element A which is a button that says "Click me" and an element B which is a div
element which is transparent but has its dimensions and zIndex
set so that it completely covers A. Then you tell WebDriver to click A. WebDriver will simulate the click so that B receives the click first. Why? Because B covers A, and if a user were to try to click on A, then B would get the event first. Whether or not A would eventually get the click event depends on how B handles the event. At any rate, the behavior with WebDriver in this case is the same as when a real user tries to click on A.
JavaScript: Now, suppose you use JavaScript to do A.click()
. This method of clicking does not reproduce what really happens when the user tries to click A. JavaScript sends the click
event directly to A, and B will not get any event.
As I mentioned above WebDriver will try to simulate as best it can what happens when a real user is using a browser. The fact of the matter is that the DOM can contain elements that a user cannot interact with, and WebDriver won't allow you to click on these element. Besides the overlapping case I mentioned, this also entails that invisible elements cannot be clicked. A common case I see in Stack Overflow questions is someone who is trying to interact with a GUI element that already exists in the DOM but becomes visible only when some other element has been manipulated. This sometimes happens with dropdown menus: you have to first click on the button the brings up the dropdown before a menu item can be selected. If someone tries to click the menu item before the menu is visible, WebDriver will balk and say that the element cannot be manipulated. If the person then tries to do it with JavaScript, it will work because the event is delivered directly to the element, irrespective of visibility.
If you are using Selenium for testing an application, my answer to this question is "almost never". By and large, your Selenium test should reproduce what a user would do with the browser. Taking the example of the drop down menu: a test should click on the button that brings up the drop down first, and then click on the menu item. If there is a problem with the GUI because the button is invisible, or the button fails to show the menu items, or something similar, then your test will fail and you'll have detected the bug. If you use JavaScript to click around, you won't be able to detect these bugs through automated testing.
I say "almost never" because there may be exceptions where it makes sense to use JavaScript. They should be very rare, though.
If you are using Selenium for scraping sites, then it is not as critical to attempt to reproduce user behavior. So using JavaScript to bypass the GUI is less of an issue.
The click executed by the driver tries to simulate the behavior of a real user as close as possible while the JavaScript HTMLElement.click()
performs the default action for the click
event, even if the element is not interactable.
The differences are:
The driver ensures that the element is visible by scrolling it into the view and checks that the element is interactable.
The driver will raise an error:
disabled
is true
)pointer-events
is none
)
A JavaScript HTMLElement.click()
will always perform the default action or will at best silently fail if the element is a disabled.
The driver is expected to bring the element into focus if it is focusable.
A JavaScript HTMLElement.click()
won't.
The driver is expected to emit all the events (mousemove, mousedown, mouseup, click, ...) just like like a real user.
A JavaScript HTMLElement.click()
emits only the click
event.
The page might rely on these extra events and might behave differently if they are not emitted.
These are the events emitted by the driver for a click with Chrome:
mouseover {target:#topic, clientX:222, clientY:343, isTrusted:true, ... }
mousemove {target:#topic, clientX:222, clientY:343, isTrusted:true, ... }
mousedown {target:#topic, clientX:222, clientY:343, isTrusted:true, ... }
mouseup {target:#topic, clientX:222, clientY:343, isTrusted:true, ... }
click {target:#topic, clientX:222, clientY:343, isTrusted:true, ... }
And this is the event emitted with a JavaScript injection:
click {target:#topic, clientX:0, clientY:0, isTrusted:false, ... }
The event emitted by a JavaScript .click()
is not trusted and the default action may not be invoked:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/Event/isTrusted
https://googlechrome.github.io/samples/event-istrusted/index.html
Note that some of the drivers are still generating untrusted events. This is the case with PhantomJS as of version 2.1.
The event emitted by a JavaScript .click()
doesn't have the coordinates of the click.
The properties clientX, clientY, screenX, screenY, layerX, layerY
are set to 0
. The page might rely on them and might behave differently.
It may be ok to use a JavaScript .click()
to scrap some data, but it is not in a testing context. It defeats the purpose of the test since it doesn't simulate the behavior of a user. So, if the click from the driver fails, then a real user will most likely also fail to perform the same click in the same conditions.
What makes the driver fail to click an element when we expect it to succeed?
The targeted element is not yet visible/interactable due to a delay or a transition effect.
Some examples :
https://developer.mozilla.org/fr/docs/Web (dropdown navigation menu) http://materializecss.com/side-nav.html (dropdown side bar)
Workarrounds:
Add a waiter to wait for the visibility, a minimum size or a steady position :
// wait visible
browser.wait(ExpectedConditions.visibilityOf(elem), 5000);
// wait visible and not disabled
browser.wait(ExpectedConditions.elementToBeClickable(elem), 5000);
// wait for minimum width
browser.wait(function minimumWidth() {
return elem.getSize().then(size => size.width > 50);
}, 5000);
Retry to click until it succeeds :
browser.wait(function clickSuccessful() {
return elem.click().then(() => true, (ex) => false);
}, 5000);
Add a delay matching the duration of the animation/transition :
browser.sleep(250);
The targeted element ends-up covered by a floating element once scrolled into the view:
The driver automatically scrolls the element into the view to make it visible. If the page contains a floating/sticky element (menu, ads, footer, notification, cookie policy..), the element may end-up covered and will no longer be visible/interactable.
Example: https://twitter.com/?lang=en
Workarounds:
Set the size of the window to a larger one to avoid the scrolling or the floating element.
Mover over the element with a negative Y
offset and then click it:
browser.actions()
.mouseMove(elem, {x: 0, y: -250})
.click()
.perform();
Scroll the element to the center of the window before the click:
browser.executeScript(function scrollCenter(elem) {
var win = elem.ownerDocument.defaultView || window,
box = elem.getBoundingClientRect(),
dy = box.top - (win.innerHeight - box.height) / 2;
win.scrollTo(win.pageXOffset, win.pageYOffset + dy);
}, element);
element.click();
Hide the floating element if it can't be avoided:
browser.executeScript(function scrollCenter(elem) {
elem.style.display = 'none';
}, element);
NOTE: let's call 'click' is end-user click. 'js click' is click via JS
Why is clicking "via JavaScript" works when a regular WebDriver click does not?
There are 2 cases for this to happen:
Then this is the most common known behavior of PhantomJS
. Some elements are sometimes not clickable, for example <div>
. This is because PhantomJS
was original made for simulating the engine of browsers (like initial HTML + CSS -> computing CSS -> rendering). But it does not mean to be interacted with as an end user's way (viewing, clicking, dragging). Therefore PhamtomJS
is only partially supported with end-users interaction.
WHY DOES JS CLICK WORK? As for either click, they are all mean click. It is like a gun with 1 barrel and 2 triggers. One from the viewport, one from JS. Since PhamtomJS
great in simulating browser's engine, a JS click should work perfectly.
For example, we got a <div>
-> We do some calculation
-> then we bind event of click to the <div>
.
-> Plus with some bad coding of angular (e.g. not handling scope's cycle properly)
We may end up with the same result. Click won't work, because WebdriverJS trying to click on the element when it has no click event handler.
WHY DOES JS CLICK WORK? Js click is like injecting js directly into the browser. Possible with 2 ways,
Fist is through devtools console (yes, WebdriverJS does communicate with devtools' console).
Second is inject a <script>
tag directly into HTML.
For each browser, the behavior will be different. But regardless, these methods are more complicating than clicking on the button. Click is using what already there (end-users click), js click is going through backdoor.
And for js click will appear to be an asynchronous task. This is related a with a kinda complex topic of 'browser asynchronous task and CPU task scheduling' (read it a while back can't find the article again). For short this will mostly result as js click will need to wait for a cycle of task scheduling of CPU and it will be ran a bit slower after the binding of the click event. (You could know this case when you found the element sometimes clickable, sometimes not. )
When exactly is this happening and what is the downside of this workaround (if any)?
=> As mention above, both mean for one purpose, but about using which entrance:
=> For performance, it is hard to say because it relies on browsers. But generally:
=> Downsides:
browser.wait()
(check this for more information)(I want to make it short, but ended up badly. Anything related with theory is complicated to explain...)
Thank you for the good explanation, I was hitting the same issue and your explanation helped to resolve my issue.
button = driver.wait.until(EC.presence_of_element_located(
(By.XPATH, "//div[@id='pagination-element']/nav[1]/span[3]/button[1]/span[1]/i[1]")
))
driver.execute_script("arguments[0].click();", button)
if (theElement.Enabled)
{
if (!theElement.Selected)
{
var driver = (IJavaScriptExecutor)Driver;
driver.ExecuteScript("arguments[0].click();", theElement); //ok
//theElement.Click();//action performed on theElement, then pops exception
}
}
I do not agree we will "almost never" use JS to simulate the click action.
Above theElement.Click()
, we'll check the Radio button but then Exception pops as above image.
Actually, this is no page load action after the Click, the click is just to select the Radio button, and I don't know why the WebDriver Click()
will cause this exception, can anyone explain why this exception occurred.
I use the Webdriver 3.141.59 and IE 11 and selenium-server-standalone-3.141.59.jar for a remote test.
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