I\'m trying to write some tests with the new android-test-kit (Espresso). But I can\'t find any information on how to check if a dialog is displayed and per
To answer question 4, which the accepted answer does not, I modified the following code, which I found here on Stack Overflow (link) for testing whether a Toast was displayed.
@NonNull
public static ViewInteraction getRootView(@NonNull Activity activity, @IdRes int id) {
return onView(withId(id)).inRoot(withDecorView(not(is(activity.getWindow().getDecorView()))));
}
The id
passed in is the id of a View
currently displayed in your dialog. You could also write the method like so:
@NonNull
public static ViewInteraction getRootView(@NonNull Activity activity, @NonNull String text) {
return onView(withText(text)).inRoot(withDecorView(not(is(activity.getWindow().getDecorView()))));
}
And now it's looking for a View
containing a particular text string.
Use it like so:
getRootView(getActivity(), R.id.text_id).perform(click());
I currently use this and it seems to work fine.
onView(withText(R.string.my_title))
.inRoot(isDialog()) // <---
.check(matches(isDisplayed()));
To verify if dialog appears you can simply check if View with a text that present inside the dialog is shown:
onView(withText("dialogText")).check(matches(isDisplayed()));
or, based on text with id
onView(withId(R.id.myDialogTextId)).check(matches(allOf(withText(myDialogText), isDisplayed()));
To click on dialogs button do this (button1 - OK, button2 - Cancel):
onView(withId(android.R.id.button1)).perform(click());
UPDATE
If you have an AlertDialog like that:
You can check if the components are displayed:
int titleId = mActivityTestRule.getActivity().getResources()
.getIdentifier( "alertTitle", "id", "android" );
onView(withId(titleId))
.inRoot(isDialog())
.check(matches(withText(R.string.my_title)))
.check(matches(isDisplayed()));
onView(withId(android.R.id.text1))
.inRoot(isDialog())
.check(matches(withText(R.string.my_message)))
.check(matches(isDisplayed()));
onView(withId(android.R.id.button2))
.inRoot(isDialog())
.check(matches(withText(android.R.string.no)))
.check(matches(isDisplayed()));
onView(withId(android.R.id.button3))
.inRoot(isDialog())
.check(matches(withText(android.R.string.yes)))
.check(matches(isDisplayed()));
and perform an action:
onView(withId(android.R.id.button3)).perform(click());
The button Ids R.id.button1 and R.id.button2 are not going to be same across devices. The Ids may change with the OS versions.
The correct way to achieve this is to use UIAutomator. Include UIAutomator dependency in your build.gradle
// Set this dependency to build and run UI Automator tests
androidTestCompile 'com.android.support.test.uiautomator:uiautomator-v18:2.1.2'
and use
// Initialize UiDevice instance
UiDevice uiDevice = UiDevice.getInstance(InstrumentationRegistry.getInstrumentation());
// Search for correct button in the dialog.
UiObject button = uiDevice.findObject(new UiSelector().text("ButtonText"));
if (button.exists() && button.isEnabled()) {
button.click();
}
Just in case anyone stumbles across this question like I did. All the answers will only work for dialogs WITH dialog buttons. Do not try and use this for progress dialogs without user interaction. Espresso keeps waiting for the app to enter an idle state. As long as the progress dialog is visible the app is not idle.