@Before public void setUp() {
Robot robot = BasicRobot.robotWithCurrentAwtHierarchy();
ApplicationLauncher.application("myApp").start();
Pause.pause(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
frame = WindowFinder.findFrame("frame0").using(robot);
JTableFixture table = frame.table(new GenericTypeMatcher<JTable>(JTable.class) {
@Override protected boolean isMatching(JTable table) {
return (table instanceof myTreeTable);
}
});
}
This code works well. If we remove the 5 seconds pause, then the table is not found because it takes some seconds to the app to load it.
I would like to know if there is a cleaner way of doing it. I tried with robot.waitForIdle() after ApplicationLauncher (I guess once EDT is empty, everything is loaded), but it just doesn´t work.
I know pause can use some conditions as an event on when to stop, but I don´t understand how to write it since JavaDoc and official doc is poor.
- Pause.pause(WaitForComponentToShowCondition.untilIsShowing(frame.component())) : I need a component, if I pass the wrapper frame it does not work. And I cannot pass the table because thats precisely what I am waiting for to get.
I understand then I should probably work with ComponentFoundCondition but I dont get it! I tired with:
ComponentMatcher matcher = new GenericTypeMatcher<JTable>(JTable.class) { @Override protected boolean isMatching(JTable table) { return (table instanceof myTreeTable); } }; Pause.pause(new ComponentFoundCondition("DebugMsg", frame.robot.finder(), matcher));
Any help?
You could use ComponentFinder to locate the component. For example, based on the matcher in the question:
Here is an alternative with lookup by name: