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seleniumxpathselenium-webdrivercss-selectorsprotractor

Locating an element by id


What is the difference between the following location techniques?

  1. element(by.id("id"));
  2. element(by.css("#id"));
  3. element(by.xpath("//*[@id='id']"));
  4. browser.executeScript("return document.querySelector('#id');");
  5. browser.executeScript("return document.getElementById('id');");

And, from the performance perspective, which would be the fastest way to locate an element by id?


Solution

  • Your question is very difficult to answer, certainly to give a single conclusive answer. In fact, I am tempted to flag this question as "too broad", which is supported by the other answers and comments.

    Take, for example, just your element(by.id("id"));. Looking through the Selenium source, most drivers just take whatever id you give, and pass it off to the wire protocol:

    public WebElement findElementById(String using) {
      if (getW3CStandardComplianceLevel() == 0) {
        return findElement("id", using);
      } else {
        return findElementByCssSelector("#" + cssEscape(using));
      }
    }
    

    As you know, each browser vendor implements their own wire protocol in a separate binary. Feel free to go further into the code, to dig a deeper hole for your self.

    For other browsers that do not support the wire protocol, for example HtmlUnit, you just have something like:

    public List<WebElement> findElementsById(String id) {
      return findElementsByXPath("//*[@id='" + id + "']");
    }
    

    and then they parse the available DOM.

    As for your performance question, anything that anyone gives you will be 1) just a feeling, or 2) pure BS! Which you can already see from the other answers and comments you are getting.

    To get a real answer (supported by actual data), there are just too many variables to consider:

    • Wire protocol as implemented by different browser vendors, plus various optimizations in different versions.
    • DOM engines as implemented by different browser vendors, plus various optimizations in different versions.
    • JavaScript engines as implemented by different browser vendors, plus various optimizations in different versions.

    Also, whatever results you get for your web app / web page will most like not apply to a different web app / web page, due to differences in the framework used to build that site.

    Bottom line is: If you are concerned about performance testing, then Selenium is the wrong answer. Selenium is a functional test library, optimized to give you the best end-user representation. Performance is a distant afterthought.

    If your goal is to get your tests to run faster, your time will be better spent looking at your test structure:

    • How frequently do you open/close the browser. This is often the most time consuming activity in a test.
    • How often do you refresh your element cache, how often do you need to? Consider moving your elements to Page Factory model, which lazy-loads all elements for you.
    • And of course the biggest speedup factor: running your tests in parallel on multiple machines.

    But I think this is getting off topic (some might suggest "ranty") from your initial question.