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UI-licious is a tool to automate user journey testing for your website on different browsers and resolutions.
Example:
Here's an example to test the Github's Login flow
I.goTo("https://github.com")
I.click("Sign up")
I.see("Join GitHub")
I.fill("Username", "brucewayne")
I.fill("Email", "[email protected]")
I.fill("Password", "supersecretpassword")
I.click("Create an account")
UI-licious is a high-level testing language, designed to be written and read by humans.
Unlike other testing libraries or tools, which relies either hard-coding CSS and XPATH selectors into the tests (or on the front-end developers writing The Perfect UI code), UI-licious tests are designed to work regardless of how the UI is implemented.
UI-licious uses dynamic code analysis on your website to evaluate best matches for the target element of the given command based on the semantics of the HTML code and the context of preceding test commands. Your UI code doesn't not have to be perfect, but UI-licious works most accurately when the website uses semantic HTML and ARIA accessibily attributes.
At best, you can write tests that are meaningful, robust, reusable, and easy to maintain.
If not, UI-licious still support CSS and XPATH as a fallback.
React, Vue, Angular, Polymer, EmberJs, KnockoutJs, JQuery, Vanilla...
UI-licious works on any front-end! UI-licious works on good old static sites, server-sider rendered and modern SPA applications.
Check out examples for: React | Vue | Angular | All
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- Microsoft Edge
- Internet Explorer 11
There's none!
Head over here to create your first test: https://snippet.uilicious.com
You can start with the tutorial on https://snippet.uilicious.com, or Read the Docs.
If you are not using a self-hosted version of UI-licious, you can use services like ngrok to temporarily expose your application to a secure public url.
UI-licious Studio is the professional edition of UI-licious, with advanced features such as:
- Projects to organise and manage tests and reports
- Datasets to manage sensitive test data and quickly swap test data between tests
- Jobs to schedule tests and setup error alerts
You need to have a UI-licious Studio account to use the Command Line Interface
You can execute UI-licious tests using the CLI. This allows you hook tests into your deployment build within your CI/CD tools.
Is UI-licious open-source?
No.
Is UI-licious based on Selenium?
Yes in the sense that UI-licious is built on the standard WC3 Webdriver Protocol for Browser Automation, which is based off the Selenium project.
Is there a self-hosted edition?
Please contact us for a commercial license to self-host UI-licious on your servers.