aceataldot
6 years agoNew Contributor
Using .ClickItem() to set dropdown takes too long, but .value doesn't fire onChange in the browser.
Hello, I've been beating my head against the wall on this one for some time now. I'm trying to use TestComplete to create an set of automated tests that will run nightly to see if anyone "broke the build" for our very large web application.
The biggest issue at the moment regards the setting of values for ComboBoxes a.k.a. dropdowns. The preferred way to set the value of one of these is using the ClickItem() method. However, some of our dropdowns contain over 1,000 items and it can take 30 seconds or more to set the value.
Here is the function to set the value that I created (the wait loop is to try and handle slow JSON calls.):
def SetJsonDropdownClick(fieldHandle, newName, newValue, waitForJson):
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
fieldHandle.ClickItem(newName)
if fieldHandle.value == newValue:
break
aqUtils.Delay(100)
else:
fieldHandle.ClickItem(newName)
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
fieldHandle.ClickItem(newName)
if fieldHandle.value == newValue:
break
aqUtils.Delay(100)
else:
fieldHandle.ClickItem(newName)
However, I found that assigning the value property can set the value property with sub-second response time.
def SetJsonDropdownUd(fieldHandle, newValue, waitForJson, triggerJson):
i = 0
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
fieldHandle.value = newValue
if fieldHandle.value == newValue:
break
i = 0
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
fieldHandle.value = newValue
if fieldHandle.value == newValue:
break
i += 1
Log.Message("Pass: " + str(i) + " Count: " + str(fieldHandle.wItemCount) + " Values [" + fieldHandle.value + "]/[" + newValue + "]")
Log.Message(fieldHandle.innerHTML)
aqUtils.Delay(100)
Aliases.browser.Refresh()
else:
fieldHandle.value = newValue
Log.Message("Pass: " + str(i) + " Count: " + str(fieldHandle.wItemCount) + " Values [" + fieldHandle.value + "]/[" + newValue + "]")
Log.Message(fieldHandle.innerHTML)
aqUtils.Delay(100)
Aliases.browser.Refresh()
else:
fieldHandle.value = newValue
While this cuts the setting time to a consistent sub-second response, it does not raise the OnChange event that triggers JSON calls to fill other dropdowns on the page. I have confirmed by looking at similar issues on this site that this is normal behavior for setting a value that way. I even added the following to the end to get OnChange to fire.
if (triggerJson):
fieldHandle.Keys("[Up][Down]")
fieldHandle.Keys("[Up][Down]")
While this reliably fires OnChange, it actually does it twice. And sometimes, the first one takes longer than the second (desired) one and the wrong data fills the next dropdown(s) and causes the test script to fail.
The following may be marginally faster:
def SetJsonDropdownItemList(fieldHandle, newName, newValue, waitForJson):
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
i = -1
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
itemListWork = fieldHandle.wItemList.split(';')
for i in range(len(itemListWork)):
if (itemListWork[i] == newName):
fieldHandle.ClickItem(i)
break
if (i >= 0 & i < len(itemListWork)):
break
else:
aqUtils.Delay(100)
else:
itemListWork = fieldHandle.wItemList.split(';')
for i in range(len(itemListWork)):
if (itemListWork[i] == newName):
fieldHandle.ClickItem(i)
break
if (waitForJson):
stopTime = GetTickCount() + 20000;
while (GetTickCount() < stopTime):
i = -1
if fieldHandle.wItemCount >= 2:
itemListWork = fieldHandle.wItemList.split(';')
for i in range(len(itemListWork)):
if (itemListWork[i] == newName):
fieldHandle.ClickItem(i)
break
if (i >= 0 & i < len(itemListWork)):
break
else:
aqUtils.Delay(100)
else:
itemListWork = fieldHandle.wItemList.split(';')
for i in range(len(itemListWork)):
if (itemListWork[i] == newName):
fieldHandle.ClickItem(i)
break
It still takes time due to the manual search. Since nearly all our dropdowns are sorted alphanumerically, I can implement a binary search. But, still, this and the text based ClickItem take 50% longer than setting the value.
I also spent a good amount of time looking at https://community.smartbear.com/t5/TestComplete-Desktop-Testing/ClickItem-Very-Slow-For-DropDown-ComboBox/m-p/136051#M8569 While we have the same symptom, our dropdown list items are children of the dropdown itself. And, the slow selection happens whether the dropdown is filled at page creation or set up later with a JSON call.
So, I either need a way to speed up ClickItem() or to trigger the fields OnChange event when setting the value. And, I know that the RaiseEvent function does not handle HTML objects.
We are using Python as the scripting language and the TC version is 14.30.
From SmartBear support we got an answer that seems to be good enough.
In short, we switched from Chrome to Firefox for the browser for these test scripts. Using Click Item in Firefox is nearly as fast as the setting the .Value directly and the JSON is automatically triggered.