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Max Schmitt
Max Schmitt

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at playwright.tech

 

Automate web browsers with Python and Playwright

Introduction

In this article, we're gonna focus on the current state of using Playwright with Python. Playwright is a Node.js library to automate browsers (Chromium, Firefox, WebKit) with a single API which provides now also the interfaces to provide other cross-language support, in this particular blog post Python.

In comparison to other automation libraries like Selenium, Playwright offers:

  • Being less flaky by auto-waiting for elements to be ready before executing actions (like click, fill)
  • Native support for emulating mobile devices, geolocation, and permissions
  • Better developer experience by automatically installing the browsers
  • Integrations for shadow-piercing selectors, native input events for mouse and keyboard or up-/downloading files

And by that, all these features are also available in the Python integration. Be aware, that Playwright Python is currently in beta but exposes already most of the common methods and functions to be used. Since communication with browsers is mostly async based, Playwright does also provide an async based interface. It's a developer decision in the end but in most cases, the sync version is easier debuggable with REPLs like ipdb, pdb, or IPython since they don't work with await and by that, your are more productive with writing your actual features.

Examples

Since the core concept of Playwright is also the same as in the Python version, the function calls are mostly the same except how you access the Playwright object. For that, you have to use the sync_playwright context manager with a with statement.

Page screenshot - sync

This code snippet navigates to whatsmyuseragent.org in Chromium, Firefox and WebKit, and saves 3 screenshots.

from playwright import sync_playwright

with sync_playwright() as p:
    for browser_type in [p.chromium, p.firefox, p.webkit]:
        browser = browser_type.launch()
        page = browser.newPage()
        page.goto('http://whatsmyuseragent.org/')
        page.screenshot(path=f'example-{browser_type.name}.png')
        browser.close()

Evaluate in browser context - sync

This code snippet navigates to example.com in Firefox and executes a script in the page context to determine the window dimensions.

from playwright import sync_playwright

with sync_playwright() as p:
    browser = p.firefox.launch()
    page = browser.newPage()
    page.goto('https://www.example.com/')
    dimensions = page.evaluate('''() => {
      return {
        width: document.documentElement.clientWidth,
        height: document.documentElement.clientHeight,
        deviceScaleFactor: window.devicePixelRatio
      }
    }''')
    print(dimensions)
    browser.close()

Intercept network requests - async

This code snippet sets up request routing for a Chromium page to log all network requests.

import asyncio
from playwright import async_playwright

async def main():
    async with async_playwright() as p:
        browser = await p.chromium.launch()
        page = await browser.newPage()

        def log_and_continue_request(route, request):
            print(request.url)
            asyncio.create_task(route.continue_())

        # Log and continue all network requests
        await page.route('**', lambda route, request: log_and_continue_request(route, request))

        await page.goto('http://todomvc.com')
        await browser.close()

asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())

Pytest integration

For writing actual end-to-end tests its common to use a test runner. In the Python world, Pytest is very common and we're using in our example the official Playwright integration for it. Instead of using it manually, it provides features like:

  • Have a separate new page and context for each test with Pytest fixtures
  • Run your end-to-end tests on multiple browsers by a CLI argument
  • Run them headful with the --headful argument to debug them easily
  • Using base-url to only use the relative URL in your Page.goto calls

It's Open Source and available on GitHub and installable with PIP:

pip install pytest pytest-playwright

Pytest has the concept that you have fixtures that will pass the values inside which are specified by the parameter name. In our case, we use for that page which will call the Playwright Pytest plugin to give us a page object.

def test_is_chromium(page):
    page.goto("https://www.google.com")
    page.type("input[name=q]", "Playwright GitHub")
    page.click("input[type=submit]")
    page.waitForSelector("text=microsoft/Playwright")

You can run it with pytest or optionally specify multiple browsers to run the test on like pytest --browser chromium --browser firefox --browser webkit which will run 3 tests in the end.

For more detail information about the Pytest usage, you'll find the documentation on GitHub.

Summary

Playwright Python is still beta, but for small projects with are not used in production its worth it to try it out to see if you benefit from it compared to other automation libraries. If you encounter any bugs or find some missing features, feel free to file an issue on GitHub.

GitHub logo microsoft / playwright-python

Python version of the Playwright testing and automation library

🎭 Playwright for Python

PyPI version PyPI pyversions Join Slack Chromium version Firefox version WebKit version

Docs | API reference | Docstrings

Playwright is a Python library to automate Chromium, Firefox and WebKit with a single API. Playwright is built to enable cross-browser web automation that is ever-green, capable, reliable and fast.

Linux macOS Windows
Chromium 86.0.4217.0
WebKit 14.0
Firefox 80.0b8

Headless execution is supported for all the browsers on all platforms.

Installation

pip install playwright
python -m playwright install

This installs Playwright and browser binaries for Chromium, Firefox and WebKit. Once installed, you can import Playwright in a Python script and automate web browser interactions. Playwright requires Python 3.7+.

Capabilities

Playwright is built to automate the broad and growing set of web browser capabilities used by Single Page Apps and Progressive Web Apps.

  • Scenarios that span multiple page, domains and iframes
  • Auto-wait for elements to be ready before…

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