WebVideo Object

Description

A video object.

IMPORTANT

  • Recording steps on a WebVideo control is not supported. When you record a test on a browser window that includes a WebVideo object, OpenText Functional Testing records a WebElement object instead

  • OpenText Functional Testing always runs steps on WebVideo objects using the Event API, even if you defined the Replay type as Mouse in the Run Settings section of the Web > Advanced pane in the OpenText Functional Testing Options dialog box (Tools > Options > GUI testing tab > Web pane > Advanced node).

Operations

The sections below list the built-in methods and properties that you can use as operations for the WebVideo object.

Note: You can also view a list and descriptions of the WebVideo description properties, for use in object repository descriptions, programmatic descriptions, checkpoint and output value steps, and as argument values for the GetTOProperty and GetROProperty methods.

Methods

Common Method CaptureBitmapSaves a screen capture of the object as a .png or .bmp image using the specified file name.
Common Method CheckChecks whether the actual value of an item matches the expected value.
Common Method CheckPropertyChecks whether the actual value of the specified object property matches the specified expected value within the specified timeout.
Common Method ChildObjectsReturns the collection of child objects contained within the object.
Common Method GetAllROProperties

Returns the collection of properties and current values from the object in the application.

Method ClickClicks the object.
Method DoubleClickClicks on the object twice.
Method DragPerforms the 'drag' part of a drag and drop operation.
Method DropPerforms the 'drop' part of a drag and drop operation.
Method FireEventTriggers an event.
Common Method GetROPropertyReturns the current value of the description property from the object in the application.
Common Method GetTOPropertiesReturns the collection of properties and values used to identify the object.
Common Method GetTOPropertyReturns the value of the specified description property from the test object description.
Common Method HighlightHighlights the object in the application.
Method HoverTapWhen hover is supported, places the pointer on the object. Otherwise, taps the object.
Method LoadReloads the media file.
Method LongPressPresses and holds the object.
Method MiddleClickMiddle-clicks the object.
Common Method OutputRetrieves the current value of an item and stores it in a specified location.
Method PanPerform a pan gesture.
Method PausePauses the media playback.
Method PinchPerform a pinch gesture.
Method PlayPlays the media file.
Common Method RefreshObjectInstructs OpenText Functional Testing to re-identify the object in the application the next time a step refers to this object.
Method RightClickRight-clicks the object.
Common Method SetTOPropertySets the value of the specified description property in the test object description.
Method SubmitSubmits a form.
Method SwipeSwipes the object.
Common Method ToStringReturns a string that represents the test object.
Common Method WaitPropertyWaits until the specified object property achieves the specified value or exceeds the specified timeout before continuing to the next step.

Properties

Common Property ExistChecks whether the object currently exists in the open application.
Common Property ObjectAccesses the native methods and properties of the object.

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Click Method

Description

Clicks the object.

Syntax

object.Click [x], [y], [button]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
button Optional. A predefined constant or number.

The mouse button used to click the object.

OpenText Functional Testing does not record the Click method for right- or middle-clicks. Instead, OpenText Functional Testing records the RightClick and MiddleClick methods.


Default value = micLeftBtn

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

  • Recording options for this method are defined in the Advanced tab of the Web Options dialog box. For details, see the section on the Web > Advanced pane in the OpenText Functional Testing Help Center.
  • For some Mozilla FireFox objects, this method is recorded only if a handler is present. For details, see the topic on working with multiple browsers in the OpenText Functional Testing Help Center.
  • If you are testing a web or hybrid application on a mobile device, this method is equivalent to performing the Tap gesture.

Example

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DoubleClick Method

Description

Clicks on the object twice.

Syntax

object.DoubleClick ([interval], [x], [y])

Arguments

ParameterDescription
interval Optional. A double floating value.
The number of seconds between the two clicks. The default value is 0.2 seconds.
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.

The y-coordinate of the click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.

 


Default value = -9999

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

  • This method is supported as long as the application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

  • If you are testing a web or hybrid application on a mobile device, this method is equivalent to performing the DoubleTap gesture.

Example

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Drag Method

Description

Performs the 'drag' part of a drag and drop operation.

Syntax

object.Drag [x], [y], [button], [Modifier]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate within the source object. 

Default = micNoCoordinate (center of the source object)


Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate within the source object.

Default = micNoCoordinate (center of the source object)


Default value = -9999
button Optional. A predefined constant or number.
The mouse button used to drag the object. (Releasing the button performs the Drop operation.)

Default = micLeftBtn (0)


Default value = micLeftBtn
Modifier Optional. A String value.
The keyboard modifier that is pressed during the Drag operation.

Possible values:
micAlt
micCtrl
micShift


Default value = 0

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

  • Drag and Drop operations are performed as a coupled step. Inserting one operation without the other causes an error to occur in the run session.
  • This test object method is not supported on Safari browsers.

OpenText Functional Testing supports the following scenarios:

  • Scenario A: One object is dragged onto another object. For example, you can drag a WebButton from one frame object (source object) to another object (target object), or drag a WebElement (source object) onto a Link object (target object) in the same frame.

  • Scenario B: An object is moved from one location in a frame to another location in the same frame. In this case, the test object used for the Drag step is the same as the test object used for the Drop step.

  • Scenario C: An item within an object is moved to another location within that object (also known as drag and pan). For example, in a map application, you can relocate an image relative to itself or drag a Slider object.

General Note:

OpenText Functional Testing always runs Drag and Drop steps using the mouse API, even if you defined the Replay type as Event in the Run Settings section of the Web > Advanced pane (Tools > Options > GUI Testing tab >Web pane > Advanced node). 

 

Notes for Scenario A:

--Recording session. You cannot record cross-object or cross-frame types of drag and drop operations (operations in which you try to drop an object on another object or in another frame). You can, however, insert these types of Drop steps manually. Note that it may be helpful to record a drag and drop operation on the object in order to determine valid coordinates for the Drag operation step. You will need to delete the recorded Drop step, though, and manually add a new Drop step for the target object instead. 

--Run session. If the application being tested supports scrolling, then OpenText Functional Testing supports scrolling when the Drag and Drop test objects are both located in the same frame. OpenText Functional Testing drags the Drag object to edge of the frame, waits for the Drop object to appear, and drops the Drag object onto the Drop object. If the application being tested does not support scrolling, then OpenText Functional Testing displays an error message when it reaches a step that requires scrolling. 

--Run session. If you want to drag a test object from one frame to another, OpenText Functional Testing tries to make both the Drag and Drop objects visible in their frames prior to performing the Drag and Drop operation. If the two objects cannot be viewed simultaneously (for example, because the browser window is too small), the step will fail.

Notes for Scenario B and Scenario C:

--If the screen resolution during a run session is not the same as the screen resolution during the recording session, then the size of the frame may be different during the run session as compared to the recording session. In this case, the target location coordinates may be different during the run session, and this may cause the test steps to fail.

--During a run session, if the coordinates of a Drop step are located outside of the visible frame area (for example, because your application changed), then the step may not run accurately. To solve this, fix the specified coordinates, as needed. The test object can be dragged only within the visible area of the frame object. Dragging the object to the edge of a window or frame does not cause the area to scroll (as it does in Scenario A).

Example

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Drop Method

Description

Performs the 'drop' part of a drag and drop operation.

Syntax

object.Drop [x], [y]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the target object on which the dragged object is dropped. If the dragged and dropped object is the same object, then the x-coordinate is relative to the upper left corner in the source location prior to being dragged.

Default = micNoCoordinate (center of the target object)


Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the target object on which the dragged object is dropped. If the dragged and dropped object is the same object, then the y-coordinate is relative to the upper left corner in the source location prior to being dragged.

Default = micNoCoordinate (center of the target object)


Default value = -9999

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

  • Drag and Drop operations are performed as a coupled step. Inserting one operation without the other causes an error to occur. For more information on Drag and Drop operations, see Drag Method.
  • This test object method is not supported on Safari browsers.

Example

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FireEvent Method

Description

Triggers an event.

Syntax

object.FireEvent EventName, [x], [y], [button]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
EventName Required. A String value.
The name of event to trigger. Available events: onchange, onclick, ondblclick, onblur, onfocus, onmousedown, onmouseup, onmouseover, onmouseout, onsubmit, onreset, onpropertychange.
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate, relative to the upper left corner of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate, relative to the upper left corner of the object.
Default value = -9999
button Optional. A predefined constant or number.
The mouse button used to fire the object.
Default value = micLeftBtn

Return Type

None

Example

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HoverTap Method

Description

When hover is supported, places the pointer on the object. Otherwise, taps the object.

Syntax

object.HoverTap ([x], [y])

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the hover point or tap. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.

Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the hover point or tap. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.

Default value = -9999

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

This method is supported as long as the application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

Example

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Load Method

Description

Reloads the media file.

Syntax

object.Load

Return Type

None.

Example

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LongPress Method

Description

Presses and holds the object.

Syntax

object.LongPress [duration], [x], [y]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
duration Optional. A double floating value.

The time period (in seconds) to hold the long tap gesture.

You can specify partial seconds as a duration time.


Default value = 1
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the tap gesture. The coordinate is relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the tap gesture. The coordinate is relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

This method is supported as long as the application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

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MiddleClick Method

Description

Middle-clicks the object.

Syntax

object.MiddleClick [x], [y]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the middle-click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the middle-click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

  • If OpenText Functional Testing does not record the MiddleClick method, it may be due to Web Event Recording Configuration settings that were preserved from the upgrade of a previous OpenText Functional Testing version. In this case, you can enable recording of these methods by resetting the Web Event Recording Configuration to a preconfigured level. For details, see the section on the Custom Web Even Recording Configuration dialog box in the OpenText Functional Testing Help Center.
  • When Event Replay is selected for the Replay type option (by using Tools > Options > GUI Testing tab >Web pane > Advanced node), OpenText Functional Testing fires onmousedown, focus, and onmouseup events for this method, which may cause slightly different behavior than the regular Click method with a micMiddleButton value for the Button argument.

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Pan Method

Description

Perform a pan gesture.

Syntax

object.Pan (deltaX, deltaY, [duration], [startX], [startY])

Arguments

ParameterDescription
deltaX Required. A long integer value.

The distance moved on the x axis, relative to the start point.

deltaY Required. A long integer value.

The distance moved on the y axis, relative to the start point.

duration Optional. A double floating value.
The number of seconds required to perform the pan gesture.
Default value = 0.5
startX Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of where the pan gesture starts. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
startY Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of where the pan gesture starts. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

This method is supported as long as the application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

This method is not supported in Internet Explorer and older versions of FireFox.

Example

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Pause Method

Description

Pauses the media playback.

Syntax

object.Pause

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

This method is not supported for non-packaged applications on mobile devices.

Example

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Pinch Method

Description

Perform a pinch gesture.

Syntax

object.Pinch (scale, [duration], [x], [y])

Arguments

ParameterDescription
scale Required. A double floating value.

The zoom scale resulting from the pinch gesture.

This is the ratio between the distance between the fingers at the end of the pinch gesture to the distance between the fingers at the beginning of the pinch gesture.

duration Optional. A double floating value.
The number of seconds required to perform the pinch gesture. The default value is 1 second.
Default value = 1
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of where the pinch gesture begins. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of of where the pinch gesture begins. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

This method is supported as long as the application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

This method is not supported in Internet Explorer and older versions of FireFox.

Example

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Play Method

Description

Plays the media file.

Syntax

object.Play

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

  • This method is not supported for non-packaged applications on mobile devices.

  • When using this method on Chrome 92, Edge 92, Firefox 91 or later versions, you must allow autoplay for media with video in the browser settings.

Example

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RightClick Method

Description

Right-clicks the object.

Syntax

object.RightClick [x], [y]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
x Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate of the right-click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
y Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate of the right-click. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

  • If OpenText Functional Testing does not record the RightClick method, it may be due to Web Event Recording Configuration settings that were preserved from the upgrade of a previous OpenText Functional Testing version. In this case, you can enable recording of these methods by resetting the Web Event Recording Configuration to a preconfigured level. For details, see the section on the Custom Web Even Recording Configuration dialog box in the OpenText Functional Testing Help Center.
  • When Event Replay is selected for the Replay type option (by using Tools > Options > GUI Testing tab >Web pane > Advanced node), OpenText Functional Testing fires onmousedown, focus, onmouseup, and oncontextmenu events for this method, which may cause slightly different behavior than the regular Click method with a micRightButton value for the Button argument.

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Submit Method

Description

Submits a form.

Syntax

object.Submit

Return Type

None.

IMPORTANT

This method simulates pressing the Enter key, while the focus is on the object specified in the statement.

If the object is not part of a Web form, the Submit method has no effect.

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Swipe Method

Description

Swipes the object.

Syntax

object.Swipe direction, [distance], [duration], [startX], [startY]

Arguments

ParameterDescription
direction Required. A MoveDirection Value.

The direction of the swipe gesture.

Possible values:

  • moveDown
  • moveLeft
  • moveRight
  • moveUp
distance Optional. A long integer value.
The distance (in pixels) of the swipe gesture.
Default value = 200
duration Optional. A double floating value.

The time period (in seconds) of the swipe gesture.

You can specify partial seconds as a duration time.


Default value = 0.25
startX Optional. A long integer value.
The x-coordinate at which the swipe gesture begins. The specified coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999
startY Optional. A long integer value.
The y-coordinate at which the swipe gesture begins. The coordinate is relative to the upper left corner of the object. The default value is the center of the object.
Default value = -9999

Return Type

None

IMPORTANT

This method is supported as long as application supports touch events and is run on a mobile device on Digital Lab or a touch-enabled browser. Using this method on desktop browsers may generate warnings, even if you are using a mobile emulator.

This method is not supported on Windows Phone.

Example

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See also: