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.
When & Why to Use This Skill
This Claude skill provides a robust toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright. It simplifies the process of verifying frontend functionality, debugging UI behavior, and capturing browser state through screenshots and logs, making it an essential tool for maintaining high-quality web application standards during development.
Use Cases
- Automated Frontend Testing: Verify that UI components, forms, and navigation flows work as expected on local development servers before deployment.
- UI Debugging and Visual Inspection: Capture full-page screenshots and inspect the rendered DOM state to identify and fix layout shifts or CSS rendering issues.
- Full-Stack Integration Testing: Use the server management helper to orchestrate both frontend and backend local servers simultaneously for end-to-end testing.
- Dynamic Content Verification: Implement the 'Reconnaissance-Then-Action' pattern to handle JavaScript-heavy applications by waiting for network idle states before performing assertions.
- Console Log Monitoring: Capture and analyze browser console logs during automation to detect hidden runtime errors or failed API calls.
| name | webapp-testing |
|---|---|
| description | 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. |
| 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:
python scripts/with_server.py --server "npm run dev" --port 5173 -- python your_automation.py
Multiple servers (e.g., backend + frontend):
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):
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
Inspect rendered DOM:
page.screenshot(path='/tmp/inspect.png', full_page=True) content = page.content() page.locator('button').all()Identify selectors from inspection results
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--helpto 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()orpage.wait_for_timeout()
Reference Files
- examples/ - Examples showing common patterns:
element_discovery.py- Discovering buttons, links, and inputs on a pagestatic_html_automation.py- Using file:// URLs for local HTMLconsole_logging.py- Capturing console logs during automation