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Test Automation Engineering Handbook

You're reading from  Test Automation Engineering Handbook

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804615492
Pages 276 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Manikandan Sambamurthy Manikandan Sambamurthy
Profile icon Manikandan Sambamurthy

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: The Basics
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Test Automation 3. Chapter 2: Test Automation Strategy 4. Chapter 3: Common Tools and Frameworks 5. Part 2: Practical Affairs
6. Chapter 4: Getting Started with the Basics 7. Chapter 5: Test Automation for Web 8. Chapter 6: Test Automation for Mobile 9. Chapter 7: Test Automation for APIs 10. Chapter 8: Test Automation for Performance 11. Part 3: Continuous Learning
12. Chapter 9: CI/CD and Test Automation 13. Chapter 10: Common Issues and Pitfalls 14. Assessments 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A:Mocking API Calls

Writing our first mobile test

WebdriverIO tests necessitate the use of JavaScript functions with async/await loops. This corresponds to the asynchronous nature of the calls made within the tests. Let us try to understand what these functions are and how to write one.

JavaScript functions with async/await

Let’s quickly understand what async/await functions are and how they are used in JavaScript. Async stands for asynchronous, and it permits the execution of a function without blocking the flow of the program. It uses promises, which are nothing but values that get fulfilled in the future. For example, let us consider a case where a third-party API is called from within a function as a promise. If the call and its response are successful, then the promise is fulfilled, but if there is a network failure, then it is rejected. We could define specific behavior for each of these cases.

When the async keyword is used before a function, it always makes it return a promise...

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