This patch:
- changes interception API so that it better aligns with what we'd like to see
in #121
- fixes the issue with redirect interception
Fixes#217.
These commands proved to be over-complicating the documentation source.
We should keep documentation source as simple to edit as possible to
make it friendly to contributions.
This patch keeps the gen:version command as it is non-invasive.
This patch implements 'autoRepeat' functionality for `keyboard.down`.
With this patch, the subsequent calls to `keyboard.down` would generate
an event with 'autoRepeat` flag set to true.
Closes#157
The motivation behind the patch:
- examples are probably the most valuable thing in the doc
- currently, one would need to navigate to `page.evaluate` and then
click to the `frame.evaluate` to see the example.
- with this patch, all the descriptions for the shortcut methods are
copied as well. So there's an example for `page.evaluate` right
away.
Drive-by: fix links for `page.$` and `page.$$`
The two tasks allow to copy text from one part of document to another.
This comes handy in organizing the documentation for our shortcut
methods, which should be exactly the same as the original methods.
The tasks work like this:
- the gen:copy(id) task saves a part of document under the name 'ID'.
- the gen:paste(id) task pastes text saved with id 'ID'
This patch also fixes a bunch of links in documentation, as well as
migrating `api.md` to use the two tasks.
This patch implements simple markdown preprocessor. The goal
is to generate certain parts of markdown, such as:
- puppeteer version
- chromium revision
- table-of-contents
- copy/paste parts of documentation (for shortcut methods)
This patch:
- teaches page.uploadFile() to resolve given file paths against
current working directory. This aligns paths handling with all the
other methods
- moves page.uploadFile() under Frame
- changes test to use relative path for file upload
The Body class was inlined in the Request and Response classes.
This patch:
- removes the Body class
- adds Request.postData public property
- adds Response.buffer(), Response.text() and Response.json() methods
Fixes#106.
The page.waitForFunction method allows to wait for a general predicate.
The predicate will be continiously polled for in page, until
it either returns true or the timeout happens.
The polling parameter could be one of the following:
- 'raf' - to poll on every animation frame
- 'mutation' - to poll on every dom mutation
- <number> - to poll every X milliseconds
References #91
This patch:
- removes Body.arrayBuffer. This method is redundant since there's
already a Body.buffer() method
- removes Body.bodyUsed getter.
References #106
This patch:
- renames page.setHTTPHeaders into page.setExtraHTTPHeaders
- starts using Map instead of Object to align with other headers
arguments
Fixes#112.
This patch improves on page.evaluate to accept a string.
The string can have a trailing '//# sourceURL=' comment which would
name the evaluation to make stacks beautiful.
In order to make sourceURL comments possible, this patch:
- removes wrapping of the client function into `Promise.resolve()`
- stops passing `awaitPromise` parameter to `Runtime.evaluate`
- starts to await promise via the `Runtime.awaitPromise` if the return type of the evaluation
is promise
closes#118
This patch removes Header class and substitutes it with a simple
Map object.
The map is chosen over the vanilla object since it has explicit
order of headers which we'd like to preserve.
References #106.
This patch renames page.evaluateOnInitialized into
page.evaluateOnNewDocument to better align with the protocol and with
what the method is actually doing.
Fixes#119.
This patch removes the InterceptedRequest.isHandled method. There's
always a single request interceptor who owns all the intercepted
requests and who know if they were handled.
References #115.
This patch:
- adds Mouse class which holds mouse state and implements mouse primitives,
such as moving, button down and button up.
- implements high-level mouse api, such as `page.click` and `page.hover`.
References #40, References #89