We await the predicate now. For synchronous predicates,
nothing should change becase the await will finish before
the next protocol message arrives (thanks to `makeWaitForNextTask`).
This changes the root object from RemoteBrowser to Playwright,
similar to local driver connection. This way, any remote connection
gets a Playwright object.
This also starts reusing PlaywrightServer class, and introduces
`cli run-server` hidden command that runs ws server on the
specified port.
Previous structure:
```
RemoteBrowser
- browser (using ConnectedBrowser for remote-specific behavior)
- selectors (special instance for this remote connection)
```
New structure:
```
Playwright
- ...
- selectors (special instance for this remote connection)
- preLaunchedBrowser (using ConnectedBrowser for remote-specific behavior)
```
This makes it much nicer to use `BrowserType` because it no longer has a template.
Technically a breaking change because of the rare edge case where someone used their own non-browser type inside the template, but I don't consider that intended behavior and think this is fine.
These methods are safe to call while the page is still open, or when it is
already closed. Works in remotely connected browser as well.
Also makes video.path() to throw for remotely connected browser.
Under the hood migrated Download and Video to use the common Artifact object.
This makes dialogs disappear and prevents stalling.
Pros:
- No need to worry about dialogs for most users.
- Those that wait for a specific dialog still get to control it.
Cons:
- Those who use Playwright to show interactive browser will have
to add an empty 'dialog' handler to prevent auto-dismiss.
We do this in cli.
This adds `{Page,Frame}.isChecked(selector)` and `ElementHandle.isChecked()` methods.
Useful to do assertions in tests:
```js
await page.click('text="Add TODO"');
expect(await page.isChecked('.item-done')).toBe(false);
```
These methods are useful for verification in tests, e.g.
```js
expect(await page.isEnabled(':text("Remove All")')).toBe(false);
await page.click(':text("Add Item")');
expect(await page.isVisible('.item:text("new item")')).toBe(true);
expect(await page.isEnabled(':text("Remove All")')).toBe(true);
```
This patch:
- introduces non-exported but used in api/impl struct types (e.g. Point);
- makes all client classes implement respective public api interface.
Pros:
- Typescript is now responsible for type checking.
We can remove our doclint checker (not removed yet).
- Electron and Android types can be defined in the same way
(this is not implemented yet).
- We can move most of the type structs like Point to the public api
and make some of them available.
Cons:
- Any cons?