Selector engines
Playwright supports multiple selector engines used to query elements in the web page.
Selector can be used to obtain ElementHandle
(see page.$() for example) or shortcut element operations to avoid intermediate handle (see page.click() for example).
#
Selector syntaxSelector is a string that consists of one or more clauses separated by >>
token, e.g. clause1 >> clause2 >> clause3
. When multiple clauses are present, next one is queried relative to the previous one's result.
Each clause contains a selector engine name and selector body, e.g. engine=body
. Here engine
is one of the supported engines (e.g. css
or a custom one). Selector body
follows the format of the particular engine, e.g. for css
engine it should be a css selector. Body format is assumed to ignore leading and trailing white spaces, so that extra whitespace can be added for readability. If selector engine needs to include >>
in the body, it should be escaped inside a string to not be confused with clause separator, e.g. text="some >> text"
.
For example,
is equivalent to
Selector engine name can be prefixed with *
to capture element that matches the particular clause instead of the last one. For example, css=article >> text=Hello
captures the element with the text Hello
, and *css=article >> text=Hello
(note the *
) captures the article
element that contains some element with the text Hello
.
For convenience, selectors in the wrong format are heuristically converted to the right format:
- Selector starting with
//
or..
is assumed to bexpath=selector
. Example:page.click('//html')
is converted topage.click('xpath=//html')
. - Selector starting and ending with a quote (either
"
or'
) is assumed to betext=selector
. Example:page.click('"foo"')
is converted topage.click('text="foo"')
. - Otherwise, selector is assumed to be
css=selector
. Example:page.click('div')
is converted topage.click('css=div')
.
#
Examples#
Built-in selector engines#
css and css:lightcss
is a default engine - any malformed selector not starting with //
nor starting and ending with a quote is assumed to be a css selector. For example, Playwright converts page.$('span > button')
to page.$('css=span > button')
.
css:light
engine is equivalent to Document.querySelector
and behaves according to the CSS spec. However, it does not pierce shadow roots, which may be inconvenient when working with Shadow DOM and Web Components. For that reason, css
engine pierces shadow roots. More specifically, every Descendant combinator pierces an arbitrary number of open shadow roots, including the implicit descendant combinator at the start of the selector.
css
engine first searches for elements in the light dom in the iteration order, and then recursively inside open shadow roots in the iteration order. It does not search inside closed shadow roots or iframes.
#
ExamplesNote that <open mode shadow root>
is not an html element, but rather a shadow root created with element.attachShadow({mode: 'open'})
.
- Both
"css=article div"
and"css:light=article div"
match the first<div>In the light dom</div>
. - Both
"css=article > div"
and"css:light=article > div"
match twodiv
elements that are direct children of thearticle
. "css=article .in-the-shadow"
matches the<div class='in-the-shadow'>
, piercing the shadow root, while"css:light=article .in-the-shadow"
does not match anything."css:light=article div > span"
does not match anything, because both light-domdiv
elements do not contain aspan
."css=article div > span"
matches the<span class='content'>
, piercing the shadow root."css=article > .in-the-shadow"
does not match anything, because<div class='in-the-shadow'>
is not a direct child ofarticle
"css:light=article > .in-the-shadow"
does not match anything."css=article li#target"
matches the<li id='target'>Deep in the shadow</li>
, piercing two shadow roots.
#
xpathXPath engine is equivalent to Document.evaluate
. Example: xpath=//html/body
.
Malformed selector starting with //
or ..
is assumed to be an xpath selector. For example, Playwright converts page.$('//html/body')
to page.$('xpath=//html/body')
.
Note that xpath
does not pierce shadow roots.
#
text and text:lightText engine finds an element that contains a text node with the passed text. For example, page.click('text=Login')
clicks on a login button, and page.waitForSelector('"lazy loaded text")
waits for the "lazy loaded text"
to appear in the page.
- By default, the match is case-insensitive, ignores leading/trailing whitespace and searches for a substring. This means
text= Login
matches<button>Button loGIN (click me)</button>
. - Text body can be escaped with single or double quotes for precise matching, insisting on exact match, including specified whitespace and case. This means
text="Login "
will only match<button>Login </button>
with exactly one space after "Login". Quoted text follows the usual escaping rules, e.g. use\"
to escape double quote in a double-quoted string:text="foo\"bar"
. - Text body can also be a JavaScript-like regex wrapped in
/
symbols. This meanstext=/^\\s*Login$/i
will match<button> loGIN</button>
with any number of spaces before "Login" and no spaces after. - Input elements of the type
button
andsubmit
are rendered with their value as text, and text engine finds them. For example,text=Login
matches<input type=button value="Login">
.
Malformed selector starting and ending with a quote (either "
or '
) is assumed to be a text selector. For example, Playwright converts page.click('"Login"')
to page.click('text="Login"')
.
text
engine open pierces shadow roots similarly to css
, while text:light
does not. Text engine first searches for elements in the light dom in the iteration order, and then recursively inside open shadow roots in the iteration order. It does not search inside closed shadow roots or iframes.
#
id, data-testid, data-test-id, data-test and their :light counterpartsAttribute engines are selecting based on the corresponding attribute value. For example: data-test-id=foo
is equivalent to css=[data-test-id="foo"]
, and id:light=foo
is equivalent to css:light=[id="foo"]
.