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var frameObj = Aliases.browser.BrowserWindow.WaitWindow("Frame Notification Bar");
This makes me think a Desktop testing license is required. WaitWindow is not one of my options for a browser window. Am I thinking wrong?
No, I think you're correct. The reason being is that you're interacting directly with the browser application rather than the web application the browser is serving up... The browser is a Desktop application and, while you're not TESTING it, you do need to interact with it.
- RUDOLF_BOTHMA6 years agoCommunity Hero
Hmm,
My organisation has Web and desktop floating licences, so that might be the difference, but my tests don't use a desktop licence and still work.
- vthomeschoolmom6 years agoSuper Contributor
How do you know that example you posted does not use the desktop license? I think it does. Thanks.
- RUDOLF_BOTHMA6 years agoCommunity Hero
Smartbear's licence manager tells us which user is using which license. All the desktop licenses are used by other users, but my user is only allocated a web license. It could be however, that Smartbear has a "Remote only" kind of user that can dip into the desktop license without using it, which would mean that the desktop licence is still required without "using" it.
What tristaanogre says about the browser being a desktop license does make sense though. I just don't understand their licensing structure and method well enough to comment.
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