Page.$$eval() method
This method runs Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(selector))
within the page and passes the result as the first argument to the pageFunction
.
Signature:
class Page {
$$eval<
Selector extends string,
Params extends unknown[],
Func extends EvaluateFuncWith<
Array<NodeFor<Selector>>,
Params
> = EvaluateFuncWith<Array<NodeFor<Selector>>, Params>,
>(
selector: Selector,
pageFunction: Func | string,
...args: Params
): Promise<Awaited<ReturnType<Func>>>;
}
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
selector | Selector | the selector to query for |
pageFunction | Func | string | the function to be evaluated in the page context. Will be passed the result of |
args | Params | any additional arguments to pass through to |
Returns:
Promise<Awaited<ReturnType<Func>>>
The result of calling pageFunction
. If it returns an element it is wrapped in an ElementHandle, else the raw value itself is returned.
Remarks
If pageFunction
returns a promise $$eval
will wait for the promise to resolve and then return its value.
Example 1
// get the amount of divs on the page
const divCount = await page.$$eval('div', divs => divs.length);
// get the text content of all the `.options` elements:
const options = await page.$$eval('div > span.options', options => {
return options.map(option => option.textContent);
});
If you are using TypeScript, you may have to provide an explicit type to the first argument of the pageFunction
. By default it is typed as Element[]
, but you may need to provide a more specific sub-type:
Example 2
await page.$$eval('input', elements => {
return elements.map(e => e.value);
});
The compiler should be able to infer the return type from the pageFunction
you provide. If it is unable to, you can use the generic type to tell the compiler what return type you expect from $$eval
:
Example 3
const allInputValues = await page.$$eval('input', elements =>
elements.map(e => e.textContent)
);