> webapp-testing
Toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright. Supports verifying frontend functionality, debugging UI behavior, capturing browser screenshots, and viewing browser logs.
curl "https://skillshub.wtf/github/awesome-copilot/webapp-testing?format=md"Web Application Testing
This skill enables comprehensive testing and debugging of local web applications using Playwright automation.
You should use the Playwright MCP Server to undertake the work if possible. If the MCP Server is unavailable, you can run the code in a local Node.js environment with Playwright installed.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Test frontend functionality in a real browser
- Verify UI behavior and interactions
- Debug web application issues
- Capture screenshots for documentation or debugging
- Inspect browser console logs
- Validate form submissions and user flows
- Check responsive design across viewports
Prerequisites
- Node.js installed on the system
- A locally running web application (or accessible URL)
- Playwright will be installed automatically if not present
Core Capabilities
1. Browser Automation
- Navigate to URLs
- Click buttons and links
- Fill form fields
- Select dropdowns
- Handle dialogs and alerts
2. Verification
- Assert element presence
- Verify text content
- Check element visibility
- Validate URLs
- Test responsive behavior
3. Debugging
- Capture screenshots
- View console logs
- Inspect network requests
- Debug failed tests
Usage Examples
Example 1: Basic Navigation Test
// Navigate to a page and verify title
await page.goto("http://localhost:3000");
const title = await page.title();
console.log("Page title:", title);
Example 2: Form Interaction
// Fill out and submit a form
await page.fill("#username", "testuser");
await page.fill("#password", "password123");
await page.click('button[type="submit"]');
await page.waitForURL("**/dashboard");
Example 3: Screenshot Capture
// Capture a screenshot for debugging
await page.screenshot({ path: "debug.png", fullPage: true });
Guidelines
- Always verify the app is running - Check that the local server is accessible before running tests
- Use explicit waits - Wait for elements or navigation to complete before interacting
- Capture screenshots on failure - Take screenshots to help debug issues
- Clean up resources - Always close the browser when done
- Handle timeouts gracefully - Set reasonable timeouts for slow operations
- Test incrementally - Start with simple interactions before complex flows
- Use selectors wisely - Prefer data-testid or role-based selectors over CSS classes
Common Patterns
Pattern: Wait for Element
await page.waitForSelector("#element-id", { state: "visible" });
Pattern: Check if Element Exists
const exists = (await page.locator("#element-id").count()) > 0;
Pattern: Get Console Logs
page.on("console", (msg) => console.log("Browser log:", msg.text()));
Pattern: Handle Errors
try {
await page.click("#button");
} catch (error) {
await page.screenshot({ path: "error.png" });
throw error;
}
Limitations
- Requires Node.js environment
- Cannot test native mobile apps (use React Native Testing Library instead)
- May have issues with complex authentication flows
- Some modern frameworks may require specific configuration
Helper Functions
Some helper functions are available in test-helper.js to simplify common tasks like waiting for elements, capturing screenshots, and handling errors. You can import and use these functions in your tests to improve readability and maintainability.
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