# Selector engines Playwright supports multiple selector engines used to query elements in the web page. Selector can be used to obtain `ElementHandle` (see [page.$()](api.md#pageselector) for example) or shortcut element operations to avoid intermediate handle (see [page.click()](api.md#pageclickselector-options) for example). ## Selector syntax Selector is a string that consists of one or more clauses separated by `>>` token, e.g. `clause1 >> clause2 >> clause3`. When multiple clauses are present, next one is queried relative to the previous one's result. Each clause contains a selector engine name and selector body, e.g. `engine=body`. Here `engine` is one of the supported engines (e.g. `css` or a custom one). Selector `body` follows the format of the particular engine, e.g. for `css` engine it should be a [css selector](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_Selectors). Body format is assumed to ignore leading and trailing whitespaces, so that extra whitespace can be added for readability. If selector engine needs to include `>>` in the body, it should be escaped inside a string to not be confused with clause separator, e.g. `text="some >> text"`. For example, ``` css=article >> css=.bar > .baz >> css=span[attr=value] ``` is equivalent to ```js document .querySelector('article') .querySelector('.bar > .baz') .querySelector('span[attr=value]') ``` For convenience, selectors in the wrong format are heuristically converted to the right format: - Selector starting with `//` is assumed to be `xpath=selector`. Example: `page.click('//html')` is converted to `page.click('xpath=//html')`. - Selector starting with `"` is assumed to be `text=selector`. Example: `page.click('"foo"')` is converted to `page.click('text="foo"')`. - Otherwise, selector is assumed to be `css=selector`. Example: `page.click('div')` is converted to `page.click('css=div')`. ## Examples ```js // queries 'div' css selector const handle = await page.$('css=div'); // queries '//html/body/div' xpath selector const handle = await page.$('xpath=//html/body/div'); // queries '"foo"' text selector const handle = await page.$('text="foo"'); // queries 'span' css selector inside the result of '//html/body/div' xpath selector const handle = await page.$('xpath=//html/body/div >> css=span'); // converted to 'css=div' const handle = await page.$('div'); // converted to 'xpath=//html/body/div' const handle = await page.$('//html/body/div'); // converted to 'text="foo"' const handle = await page.$('"foo"'); // queries 'span' css selector inside the div handle const handle = await divHandle.$('css=span'); ``` ## Built-in selector engines ### css CSS engine is equivalent to [`Document.querySelector`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/Document/querySelector). Example: `css=.article > span:nth-child(2) li`. > **NOTE** Malformed selector not starting with `//` nor with `#` is automatically transformed to css selector. For example, Playwright converts `page.$('span > button')` to `page.$('css=span > button')`. Selectors starting with `#` are converted to [text](#text). Selectors starting with `//` are converted to [xpath](#xpath). ### xpath XPath engine is equivalent to [`Document.evaluate`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/Document/evaluate). Example: `xpath=//html/body`. > **NOTE** Malformed selector starting with `//` is automatically transformed to xpath selector. For example, Playwright converts `page.$('//html/body')` to `page.$('xpath=//html/body')`. ### text Text engine finds an element that contains a text node with passed text. Example: `text=Login`. - By default, the match is case-insensitive, and ignores leading/trailing whitespace. This means `text= Login` matches ``. - Text body can be escaped with double quotes for precise matching, insisting on specific whitespace and case. This means `text="Login "` will only match `` with exactly one space after "Login". - Text body can also be a JavaScript-like regex wrapped in `/` symbols. This means `text=/^\\s*Login$/i` will match `` with any number of spaces before "Login" and no spaces after. > **NOTE** Malformed selector starting with `"` is automatically transformed to text selector. For example, Playwright converts `page.click('"Login"')` to `page.click('text="Login"')`. ### id, data-testid, data-test-id, data-test Id engines are selecting based on the corresponding atrribute value. For example: `data-test-id=foo` is equivalent to `querySelector('*[data-test-id=foo]')`. ## Custom selector engines Playwright supports custom selector engines, registered with [selectors.register(name, script[, options])](api.md#selectorsregistername-script-options). Selector engine should have the following properties: - `create` Function to create a relative selector from `root` (root is either a `Document`, `ShadowRoot` or `Element`) to a `target` element. - `query` Function to query first element matching `selector` relative to the `root`. - `queryAll` Function to query all elements matching `selector` relative to the `root`. By default the engine is run directly in the frame's JavaScript context and, for example, can call an application-defined function. To isolate the engine from any JavaScript in the frame, but leave access to the DOM, resgister the engine with `{contentScript: true}` option. Content script engine is safer because it is protected from any tampering with the global objects, for example altering `Node.prototype` methods. All built-in selector engines run as content scripts. Note that running as a content script is not guaranteed when the engine is used together with other custom engines. An example of registering selector engine that queries elements based on a tag name: ```js // Must be a function that evaluates to a selector engine instance. const createTagNameEngine = () => ({ // Creates a selector that matches given target when queried at the root. // Can return undefined if unable to create one. create(root, target) { return root.querySelector(target.tagName) === target ? target.tagName : undefined; }, // Returns the first element matching given selector in the root's subtree. query(root, selector) { return root.querySelector(selector); }, // Returns all elements matching given selector in the root's subtree. queryAll(root, selector) { return Array.from(root.querySelectorAll(selector)); } }); // Register the engine. Selectors will be prefixed with "tag=". await selectors.register('tag', createTagNameEngine); // Now we can use 'tag=' selectors. const button = await page.$('tag=button'); // We can combine it with other selector engines. await page.click('tag=div >> text="Click me"'); // We can use it in any methods supporting selectors. const buttonCount = await page.$$eval('tag=button', buttons => buttons.length); ```