Action group: Browsers
The action switches the control focus on the currently active page to the specified frame. A frame is a separate, complete HTML document that, together with other HTML documents, can be displayed in a browser window. Frames can also be nested within a frame, and frames can also be nested within frames. Frames divide a web page into separate minicomics on the same screen, which are independent of each other. Each window can have its own address.
Web elements that are inside a frame located on a web page are isolated from elements on the page itself and elements inside other frames on the page. Elements within a frame are not available to be manipulated by actions until you switch to that frame.
For a deeper understanding of the structure of frames and the principles of their construction, read the information on the links below:
More on frames: https://osipenkov.ru/iframe-tracking-gtm/ https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A4%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B9%D0%BC_(HTML) https://www.tutorialspoint.com/html/html_frames.htm An example of a robot scheme when switching between frames: Frames (1).robin-source |
Technically, the action moves the control focus through the frame structure. This is done by specifying the target frame to move to and the search area of that frame.
Property | Description | Type | Filling example | Mandatory field |
Parameters | ||||
Context | Action context for working with the browser. | Robin.Selenium | Browser context | Yes |
Element | Frame as an element for interaction | Robin.WebElement | No | |
Name | Frame name | Robin.String | No | |
Index | Frame index. Numbering starts from 0. | Robin.Numeric | No | |
Frame search area | Frame search area. There are 3 options available: current frame - search within the current frame; parent frame - search within the parent frame; entire page - search within the entire page. | Robin.String | No |
You can select and fill one of the optional parameters;
Frame elements are not available when working with page elements. In order to access the frame elements, you must switch to the frame;
When working with frame elements, page elements are not available. In order to continue working with page elements, you need to switch from the frame back to the page;
You can also switch back to the current tab using the "Switch to Tab" action;
To determine the number of frames on the page and their attributes, you need to use the developer console. The console is opened by pressing the F12 key in the browser where the iframe is displayed (if there is one on the page).
Browser page with the developer console open:
As part of the example of filling out the "Frame search area" field, consider a site with frames: https://www.tutorialspoint.com/html/html_frames.htm , as well as the robot scheme Frames (1).robin-source
Implement actions using the "Index" parameter and "Frame search area" parameter options.
The frame (the one switched to) contains two frames.
2. The Current frame option - search for a frame inside the current frame. Let's switch to the frame with the text "This is main page and content from any link will be displayed here". This is the second frame inside the current frame. Let's specify the action parameters:
Next, use the "Get Text" action to get the text from the frame (see attached robot scheme).
3. The Entire page option - let's switch the focus from the frame to the main page. To do this, specify the "Entire page" option and the context of the open browser. Leave the other parameters empty.
Let's run the "Get Text" action from the main page (see attached robot scheme).
Go to website with a frame https://www.w3schools.com/css/tryit.asp?filename=trycss_default, switch to it for further work with it and get the text from the "My First CSS Example" frame.
Implement the action using the "Name", "Element" parameters and "Frame search area" parameter option.
Use the "Open browser", "Switch to frame", "Get text" actions.
The program robot completed successfully.
In this case, if you disable the "Switch to frame" action, the item will not be found because the item is searched for in the current document, but the item itself is in a nested document.