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Kristijan Pajtasev
Kristijan Pajtasev

Posted on • Originally published at browserstack.com

Selenium vs Cucumber: Core Differences

Testing is very important when it comes to software development. It not only helps you ensure that the code you develop is working correctly, but also that it did not break the existing code. If you are working on web applications, you probably have already heard of Selenium and Cucumber. Both are quite popular solutions. But what is their purpose? How do they fit together and which one to choose?

This guide highlights the core differences between Selenium and Cucumber.

What is Selenium

Selenium is an automation tool for testing web applications. Very clear, right? Or just a generic sentence that raises more questions than answers?

Let us look at a scenario.

You develop a web application. Once you are done, you want to test it. So you will open it in Chrome. Click the Menu icon, and click around to ensure that everything is working as intended. But not everyone uses Chrome, and now you need to repeat everything in Safari and Firefox and every other browser and device the user uses. This is quite cumbersome. The load keeps increasing as you get deeper into the browser matrix.

Any small change that you make to your application also has to be tested on all these browsers. Thus pushing any QA into the rabbit hole.

This is where Selenium comes to the rescue.

With Selenium, all that you have to do is write tests. These tests automate the whole process for you. You can write tests for practically all the use cases like checking elements, functionality, behaviour, etc. Selenium executes these tests automatically and in all the browsers you want.

Selenium supports all major programming languages like JavaScript, Python, Java, PHP, etc. And when it comes to supported browsers, Selenium runs all the tests through the browser-specific driver. That means running tests on the additional browser is just a matter of installing an additional driver.

Advantages of Using Selenium

  • Automates testing across browsers
  • Open-source
  • Supports multiple tabs
  • Well documented
  • Can be written in any popular programming languages

Disadvantages of Using Selenium

  • Requires browser-specific driver
  • Doesn’t have a built-in reporting tool
  • It has challenges with handling iframes
  • The user needs to be familiar with some programming language

What is Cucumber

Cucumber is the tool for writing behavior-driven tests. But first, what are behavior-driven tests?

You may know how to write general tests. Usually, it is something like, you find an element selector, use it check its contents, and compare it with the expected value. With BDD tests, you describe behavior. You write human-readable text describing the user requirements. This text results in tests being executed. This is where Cucumber comes into play. This tool enables you to convert that text into the testing code. For instance, if there are multiple unit tests, with Cucumber you can describe some expected user behavior. These tests often define acceptance scenarios for features.

When writing Cucumber tests, there are two parts you need to do — Steps and features.

  1. Steps: Steps are functions. These functions help you perform a testing action. That could be to load a web application, click some element, enter text into the input field, or anything that the user might be doing. These functions are written in the programming language you chose and also contain text for which they are triggered.

  2. Features: Features contain scenarios, which are your text. They describe behaviour starting with keywords and based on those sentences, Cucumber maps them to the right step to be executed.

It might be a bit simpler by using the example.

Scenario: The menu opens when the icon is clicked
Given you load the landing page
When you click the menu item
Then a menu will be visible
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The above example has four lines.

  • 1st line: This is the scenario line and just defines that it is the start of the test scenario. Something like a short description of what is happening in this test.

  • 2nd line: This first used step, and from the description of it, we can assume that the step code will open the landing page of the application in the browser.

  • 3rd line: Once the page is loaded, this step will click on the menu item. The logic behind would have a selector for the menu icon on the page and trigger a click even on it.

  • 4th line: This last line triggers step checking if the menu is visible. The way it is written above is quite straightforward and very understandable. However, in the step definition again, there would be some selector for the menu element. Then the code would try to fetch that element and see if it exists and if it is visible.

As you can see, tests written this way are easy to comprehend for both developers and business users. You might think, why would we want non-technical people to understand code? And that is a good question. But it is not about them understanding the code, it is about getting both sides on the same conversation. Behavior-driven tests directly mirror requirements and could be used in your ticket to define them.

Advantages of Using Cucumber

  • It is human-readable, which means business people can understand it
  • Steps can be written in any programming language
  • Because it uses human-readable text, can be used for describing user requirements

Disadvantages of using Cucumber

  • It requires user involvement to describe scenarios right
  • Requires maintenance of both steps and scenarios

Selenium vs Cucumber: Differences

Here are a few differences between Selenium and Cucumber:

  1. Selenium is a test automation framework whereas Cucumber is a behavioral testing tool.
  2. Selenium is written in programming languages like Java, .Net, etc. whereas Cucumber is written both in programming language as well as plain text.
  3. Selenium supports conditional statements but Cucumber does not.
  4. Test Scripts are written based on requirements in Selenium but with Cucumber, you start with scenarios first.
  5. Selenium scripts are hard to develop whereas Cucumber was easier to develop.
  6. Identifying syntax errors is pretty easy while you are developing the script, whereas you cannot find errors in Cucumber.
  7. Both Selenium supports Perl, Python, Java, PHP, .Net, etc.

Here is a tabular version of the differences between Cucumber and Selenium

Image description

When to use which?

From the description of what Selenium and Cucumber are it might be already clear. Both are used in testing, but each has a slightly different role. Selenium automates tests, and Cucumber helps us make them more readable. You could think of it as driving a car or getting a taxi. Both will get you to your location. You can use Cucumber without Selenium, just like you can use Selenium without Cucumber. But by using them together, you get a combination where you write clear and understandable tests to everyone with Selenium running them on all required browsers. That said, you can use Selenium and Cucumber in tandem with each other.

Most organizations, today use Cucumber along with Selenium as it makes it easier to read and understand the flow of applications among the members from different teams.

Cloud testing products like BrowserStack support Selenium testing with Cucumber.


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