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108 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
108 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
# JavaScript execution
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Puppeteer allows evaluating JavaScript functions in the context of the page
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driven by Puppeteer:
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```ts
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// Import puppeteer
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import puppeteer from 'puppeteer';
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(async () => {
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// Launch the browser
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const browser = await puppeteer.launch();
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// Create a page
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const page = await browser.newPage();
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// Go to your site
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await page.goto('YOUR_SITE');
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// Evaluate JavaScript
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const three = await page.evaluate(() => {
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return 1 + 2;
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});
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console.log(three);
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// Close browser.
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await browser.close();
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})();
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```
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:::caution
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Although the function is defined in your script context, it actually gets
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stringified by Puppeteer, sent to the target page over Chrome DevTools protocol
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and evaluated there. It means that the function cannot access scope variables in
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your script.
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:::
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Alternatively, you can provide a function body as a string:
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```ts
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// Evaluate JavaScript
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const three = await page.evaluate(`
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1 + 2
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`);
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```
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:::caution
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The example above produces the equivalent results but it also illustrates that
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the types and global variables available to the evaluated function cannot be
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known. Especially, in TypeScript you should be careful to make sure that objects
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referenced by the evaluated function are correct.
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:::
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## Return types
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The functions you evaluate can return values. If the returned value is of a
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primitive type, it gets automatically converted by Puppeteer to a primitive type
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in the script context like in the previous example.
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If the script returns an object, Puppeteer serializes it to a JSON and reconstructs it on the script side. This process might not always yield correct results, for example, when you return a DOM node:
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```ts
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const body = await page.evaluate(() => {
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return document.body;
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});
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console.log(body); // {}, unexpected!
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```
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To work with the returned objects, Puppeteer offers a way to return objects by reference:
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```ts
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const body = await page.evaluateHandle(() => {
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return document.body;
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});
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console.log(body instanceof ElementHandle); // true
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```
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The returned object is either a `JSHandle` or a `ElementHandle`. `ElementHandle` extends `JSHandle` and it is only created for DOM elements.
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See the [API documentation](https://pptr.dev/api) for more details about what methods are available for handles.
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## Passing arguments to the evaluate function
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You can provide arguments to your function:
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```ts
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const three = await page.evaluate(
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(a, b) => {
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return a + b; // 1 + 2
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},
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1,
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2
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);
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```
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The arguments can be primitive values or `JSHandle`s.
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:::note
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Page, JSHandle and ElementHandle offer several different helpers to evaluate JavaScript but they all follow the basic principles outlined in this guide.
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:::
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