Closes https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/issues/32159. I
originally set out to enable Strict Mode for our React UI, but found a
way better thing: Enabling the lint rules we had already installed!
`eslint-plugin-react` is already in of our `package.json`, and this PR
enables it and fixes some of the reported issues. Most of them are
around the `key` prop which is mostly about performance, but there's
also fixes for misspelled `data-testid` props.
Addresses https://github.com/microsoft/playwright/issues/31863. This PR
is chonky, but the individual commits should be easy to review. If
they're not, i'm happy to break them out into individual PRs.
There's two main things this does:
1. Remove some unused imports
2. Add a `clsx`-inspired helper function for classname templating
I wasn't able to replace `ReactDOM.render` with `ReactDOM.createRoot`.
This is the new recommended way starting with React 18, and the existing
one is going to be deprecated at some point. But it somehow breaks our
tests, i'll have to investigate that separately.
- Update copy to clipboard button.
- Reveal test source in the Source tab instead of external editor.
- New button to reveal in the external editor in the Source tab.
- Move the Pick Locator button next to snapshot tabs.
Previously, new `Recorder` instance was given an existing
`InjectedScript`. However, we built a separate source for
`InjectedScript` vs `Recorder`, and both bundles contain their own copy
of all helper modules, e.g. `roleUtils`.
This resulted in two copies of helper modules, which is troublesome for
any module-level globals like a top-level cache. Depending on whether
`Recorder` or `InjectedScript` called into the helper, they would access
the different value of a module global, which lead to bugs.
To prevent this, we force any external dependencies to be imported
through the `InjectedScript.utils`.