home / skills / nickcrew / claude-cortex / webapp-testing

webapp-testing skill

/skills/webapp-testing

This skill guides you to test local web apps with Playwright, manage servers, waiting for networkidle, and capture diagnostics.

npx playbooks add skill nickcrew/claude-cortex --skill webapp-testing

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

Files (6)
SKILL.md
3.8 KB
---
name: webapp-testing
description: Toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright. Use when verifying frontend functionality, debugging UI behavior, capturing browser screenshots, and viewing browser logs.
license: MIT License - Complete terms in LICENSE.txt
---

# Web Application Testing

To test local web applications, write native Python Playwright scripts.

**Helper Scripts Available**:
- `scripts/with_server.py` - Manages server lifecycle (supports multiple servers)

**Always run scripts with `--help` first** to see usage. DO NOT read the source until you try running the script first and find that a customized solution is abslutely necessary. These scripts can be very large and thus pollute your context window. They exist to be called directly as black-box scripts rather than ingested into your context window.

## Decision Tree: Choosing Your Approach

```
User task → Is it static HTML?
    ├─ Yes → Read HTML file directly to identify selectors
    │         ├─ Success → Write Playwright script using selectors
    │         └─ Fails/Incomplete → Treat as dynamic (below)
    │
    └─ No (dynamic webapp) → Is the server already running?
        ├─ No → Run: python scripts/with_server.py --help
        │        Then use the helper + write simplified Playwright script
        │
        └─ Yes → Reconnaissance-then-action:
            1. Navigate and wait for networkidle
            2. Take screenshot or inspect DOM
            3. Identify selectors from rendered state
            4. Execute actions with discovered selectors
```

## Example: Using with_server.py

To start a server, run `--help` first, then use the helper:

**Single server:**
```bash
python scripts/with_server.py --server "npm run dev" --port 5173 -- python your_automation.py
```

**Multiple servers (e.g., backend + frontend):**
```bash
python scripts/with_server.py \
  --server "cd backend && python server.py" --port 3000 \
  --server "cd frontend && npm run dev" --port 5173 \
  -- python your_automation.py
```

To create an automation script, include only Playwright logic (servers are managed automatically):
```python
from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright

with sync_playwright() as p:
    browser = p.chromium.launch(headless=True) # Always launch chromium in headless mode
    page = browser.new_page()
    page.goto('http://localhost:5173') # Server already running and ready
    page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle') # CRITICAL: Wait for JS to execute
    # ... your automation logic
    browser.close()
```

## Reconnaissance-Then-Action Pattern

1. **Inspect rendered DOM**:
   ```python
   page.screenshot(path='/tmp/inspect.png', full_page=True)
   content = page.content()
   page.locator('button').all()
   ```

2. **Identify selectors** from inspection results

3. **Execute actions** using discovered selectors

## Common Pitfall

❌ **Don't** inspect the DOM before waiting for `networkidle` on dynamic apps
✅ **Do** wait for `page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle')` before inspection

## Best Practices

- **Use bundled scripts as black boxes** - To accomplish a task, consider whether one of the scripts available in `scripts/` can help. These scripts handle common, complex workflows reliably without cluttering the context window. Use `--help` to see usage, then invoke directly. 
- Use `sync_playwright()` for synchronous scripts
- Always close the browser when done
- Use descriptive selectors: `text=`, `role=`, CSS selectors, or IDs
- Add appropriate waits: `page.wait_for_selector()` or `page.wait_for_timeout()`

## Reference Files

- **examples/** - Examples showing common patterns:
  - `element_discovery.py` - Discovering buttons, links, and inputs on a page
  - `static_html_automation.py` - Using file:// URLs for local HTML
  - `console_logging.py` - Capturing console logs during automation

Overview

This skill is a toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright and Python. It provides helper scripts to manage server lifecycles, patterns for reconnaissance-driven UI testing, and example automations for capturing screenshots, logs, and DOM state. Use it to verify frontend behavior, debug UI issues, and automate repeatable checks against local dev servers.

How this skill works

The toolkit supplies a scripts/with_server.py helper that launches one or more local servers and runs your Playwright script as a child process. Typical flows are: start servers with the helper, use Playwright to navigate to localhost, wait for networkidle, inspect the rendered DOM or take screenshots, then interact via discovered selectors. Example scripts show element discovery, static file automation, and capturing console logs.

When to use it

  • Verifying frontend functionality during local development
  • Debugging UI behavior that requires a running backend/frontend stack
  • Capturing full-page screenshots or DOM snapshots for inspections
  • Automating end-to-end checks that depend on local servers
  • Exploring dynamic pages to discover stable selectors before writing interactions

Best practices

  • Run helper scripts with --help first and call them as black-box tools rather than ingesting their source
  • Always wait for page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle') before inspecting or querying dynamic pages
  • Use sync_playwright() for synchronous scripts when appropriate
  • Close the browser after each run to avoid resource leaks
  • Prefer descriptive selectors (text=, role=, IDs, CSS) and add explicit waits like page.wait_for_selector()

Example use cases

  • Start frontend and backend together, then run a Playwright script that logs in and exercises flows
  • Inspect a dynamic page by taking a full-page screenshot and saving page.content() for selector discovery
  • Run automated smoke tests on a local build before committing changes
  • Capture browser console logs and network idle timing to diagnose intermittent UI failures
  • Automate interactions on static HTML files using file:// URLs for fast unit-style checks

FAQ

Do I need to read the helper script source to use it?

No. Run python scripts/with_server.py --help and use it as a black-box launcher. Only inspect source if customization is absolutely necessary.

Should I wait for networkidle before querying the DOM?

Yes. For dynamic apps always call page.wait_for_load_state('networkidle') before taking screenshots or running DOM queries to avoid missing elements.