commit | 9024f47e9525586042086632f8020078566b92ea | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Devon Carew <devoncarew@gmail.com> | Sat Jan 31 00:38:25 2015 -0800 |
committer | Devon Carew <devoncarew@gmail.com> | Sat Jan 31 00:38:25 2015 -0800 |
tree | 0b7abff02b27a9aa00e9b9f2d5338cac7b96aa55 | |
parent | c24f9cc92fe5c999dfad6807f0dc0033d6633cfa [diff] |
run tests on travis using chromedriver
Provides WebDriver bindings for Dart. These use the WebDriver JSON interface, and as such, require the use of the WebDriver remote server.
For a nicer interface and better support consider using: https://github.com/google/dart-sync-webdriver
Depend on it
Add this to your package's pubspec.yaml file:
dependencies: webdriver: any
If your package is an application package you should use any as the version constraint.
Install it
If you're using the Dart Editor, choose:
Menu > Tools > Pub Install
Or if you want to install from the command line, run:
$ pub install
Import it
Now in your Dart code, you can use:
import 'package:webdriver/webdriver.dart';
To run the tests, you need to first run selenium-server-standalone, which you can download from https://code.google.com/p/selenium/downloads.