This PR greatly improves the types within Puppeteer:
- **Almost everything** is auto-deduced.
- Parameters don't need to be specified in the function. They are deduced from the spread.
- Return types don't need to be specified. They are deduced from the function. (More on this below)
- Selections based on tag names correctly deduce element type, similar to TypeScript's mechanism for `getElementByTagName`.
- [**BREAKING CHANGE**] We've removed the ability to declare return types in type arguments for the following reasons:
1. Setting them will indubitably break auto-deduction.
2. You can just use `as ...` in TypeScript to coerce the correct type (given it makes sense).
- [**BREAKING CHANGE**] `waitFor` is officially gone.
To migrate to these changes, there are only four things you may need to change:
- If you set a return type using the `ReturnType` type parameter, remove it and use `as ...` and `HandleFor` (if necessary).
⛔ `evaluate<ReturnType>(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `(await evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)) as ReturnType`
⛔ `evaluateHandle<ReturnType>(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `(await evaluateHandle(a, b) => {...}, a, b)) as HandleFor<ReturnType>`
- If you set any type parameters in the *parameters* of an evaluation function, remove them.
⛔ `evaluate(a: number, b: number) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)`
- If you set any type parameters in the method's declaration, remove them.
⛔ `evaluate<(a: number, b: number) => void>((a, b) => {...}, a, b)`
✅ `evaluate(a, b) => {...}, a, b)`
* The testing tsconfig.json inherits from the base TS config.
* A lot of type assertions have been inserted...a lot.
* All testing utilities have migrated to TS.
* text-diff is being replaced with diff for TS compatibility.
* ProtocolError has been added to PuppeteerErrors and PuppeteerErrors is no longer a record (it's been frozen).
* Fixes a small bug where null was an allowable media type in emulation (should be undefined).
So it appears that all bindings are added to the secondary world and all
evaluations are also running there. ElementHandle.evaluate is returning
handles from the main world though. Therefore, we need to be careful
and adopt handles to the right context before doing waitForSelector
So it appears that all bindings are added to the secondary world and all
evaluations are also running there. ElementHandle.evaluate is returning
handles from the main world though. Therefore, we need to be careful
and adopt handles to the right context before doing waitForSelector.
This updates the regular expression used to parse aria attribute
selectors so that single quotes may be used as an alternative to double
quotes, e.g. `aria/Single button[role='button']`.
Issues: #7721
Co-authored-by: Andy Earnshaw <andy.earnshaw@gmail.com>
The values of these constant variables are always the exact same when the `parseAriaSelector()` function is called, so these can be moved out of the function.
We're seeing odd failures with Prettier on some CI branches; my hunch is that they are installing different versions of the package and therefore getting formatting conflicts. This PR updates them all and pins them to specific versions - something we should probably consider generally, or remove our `package-lock.json` from the gitignore.
This commit adds a new built-in handler for querying by accessible name and role (#6307).
Support for waitForSelector will be added in a follow-up commit.