ClientFunction Constructor
Creates a client function.
ClientFunction(fn [, options]) → ClientFunction
| Parameter | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
fn |
Function | A function to be executed on the client side. |
options (optional) |
Object | See Options. |
Client functions cannot return DOM nodes. Use selectors instead.
The following example shows how to create a client function.
import { ClientFunction } from 'testcafe';
const getWindowLocation = ClientFunction(() => window.location);
Options #
options.dependencies #
Type: Object
The dependencies option contains functions, variables, or objects used by the client function internally.
Properties of the dependencies object are added to the client function's scope as variables.
Dependencies passed to ClientFunction must be Selectors, ClientFunctions or a serializable object.
The following code sample demonstrates a client function (getArticleHeaderHTML) that
calls a selector (articleHeader) internally.
TestCafe passes this selector to getArticleHeaderHTML as a dependency.
import { Selector, ClientFunction } from 'testcafe';
const articleHeader = Selector('#article-header');
const getArticleHeaderHTML = ClientFunction(() => articleHeader().innerHTML, {
dependencies: { articleHeader }
});
When a client function calls a selector internally, the selector does not wait for the element to appear in the DOM and is executed at once, like a client function.
When dependencies are passed to a client function, TypeScript cannot find them during compilation. This happens because dependencies are added to the function's scope at runtime and can cause an error:
Error: TypeScript compilation failed.
Cannot find name 'dependencyFoo'.
Add the // @ts-ignore TypeScript comment to suppress this error.
options.boundTestRun #
Type: Object
Use the boundTestRun option to call a client function from a Node.js callback.
To use this option, assign the current test controller
to the boundTestRun option.
For details, see Call Client Functions from Node.js Callbacks.