Given the following HTML page:
<html>
<head>
<title>WatiN Test</title>
</head>
<body>
<div>
<p>Hello World!</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>
I would like to be able to search for some text (lets say "World"
), and get a reference to its parent element (in this case the <p>
element).
If I try this:
var element = ie.Element(Find.ByText(t => t.Contains("World")))
or this:
var element = ie.Element(e => e.Text != null && e.Text.Contains("World"));
I get back the <html>
element. This is consistent with the WatiN documentation for Element.Text
which states: "Gets the innertext of this element (and the innertext of all the elements contained in this element)".
Since all text within the page is contained within the <html>
element, I'll always get this back instead of the immediate parent.
Is there a way to get just the text immediately beneath an element (not the text within the elements contained by it)?
Is there another way of doing this?
Many thanks.
You could use Find.BySelector
Bellow code will find first element inside the
<body/>
with text containing "World". Elements which are classified as element containers and has child elements will be omitted.Note: You may wonder why I wrote
ie.ElementOfType<Body>(Find.First()).Element
instead of justie.Element
. This should work, but it doesn't. I think it's a bug. I wrote a post about it on WatiN mailing list and will update this answer when I receive the answer.I've come up with something that works, but it's a bit hacky and very inefficient.
This essentially works on the basis that the deepest containing element will have the shortest
InnerHtml
. That is, all other elements which contain the immediate parent will include it's HTML as well, and therefore be longer!