I want to extract some information from the DOM with Selenium. I\'m using the C# WebDriver.
Looking at the IWebElement interface you can easily extract a given attri
you can do a FindElement(By.tag("body")) to return a list of WebElements and then parse the results as you suggest.
The .attributes
property in JavaScript will return an array of all the attributes a given element has and it's value.
So what you'll need to do is first get a driver
that has the capability to run JavaScript:
IJavascriptExecutor javascriptDriver = (IJavaScriptExecutor)driver;
Now, execute it by:
Dictionary<string, object> attributes = javascriptDriver.ExecuteScript("var items = {}; for (index = 0; index < arguments[0].attributes.length; ++index) { items[arguments[0].attributes[index].name] = arguments[0].attributes[index].value }; return items;", element) as Dictionary<string, object>;
The idea behind the JavaScript is to use the JavaScript attributes
property within the element itself and then pull out the information we need - the name and value of the attribute. The attributes
property, in reality, pulls a lot of information about each individual property but we want only two fields. So we get those two fields, put them into a dictionary and WebDriver will then parse it back to us. (It could probably be cleaned up a bit)
It's now a Dictionary
and thus you can loop through however you like. The key
of each pair will be the name of the attribute, and the value
of each pair will be the value of the attribute.
Only tested this with a few elements dotted around the web (here, Google, and a few small web pages) and it seems to work well.
You can try this:
IWebElement element = driver.FindElement(By.Id("myButton"));
string elementHtml = element.GetAttribute("outerHTML");
This will give you the html of the element. From here, you can parse it, as Arran suggested
List<IWebElement> el = new List<IWebElement>(); el.AddRange(driver.FindElements(By.CssSelector("*")));
List<string> ag= new List<string>();
for (int b = 0; b < el.Count; b++)
{
ag.Add(el[b].GetAttribute("outerHTML"));
}
You can try this:
Actions newTab = new Actions(web driver);
newTab.ContextClick(element).SendKeys(Keys.ArrowDown).SendKeys(Keys.ArrowDown).SendKeys(Keys.Return).Build().Perform();
I have created WebDriver Extension based on the first answer
public static List<string> GetElementAttributes(this RemoteWebDriver driver, IWebElement element)
{
IJavaScriptExecutor ex = driver;
var attributesAndValues = (Dictionary<string, object>)ex.ExecuteScript("var items = { }; for (index = 0; index < arguments[0].attributes.length; ++index) { items[arguments[0].attributes[index].name] = arguments[0].attributes[index].value }; return items;", element);
var attributes = attributesAndValues.Keys.ToList();
return attributes;
}