# Getting Started - [Installation](#installation) - [Usage](#usage) - [First script](#first-script) - [Record scripts](#record-scripts) - [TypeScript support](#typescript-support) - [System requirements](#system-requirements) ## Installation Use npm or Yarn to install Playwright in your Node.js project. See [system requirements](#system-requirements). ```sh npm i -D playwright ``` This single command downloads the Playwright NPM package and browser binaries for Chromium, Firefox and WebKit. To modify this behavior see [installation parameters](installation.md). ## Usage Once installed, you can `require` Playwright in a Node.js script, and launch any of the 3 browsers (`chromium`, `firefox` and `webkit`). ```js const { chromium } = require('playwright'); (async () => { const browser = await chromium.launch(); // Create pages, interact with UI elements, assert values await browser.close(); })(); ``` Playwright APIs are asynchronous and return Promise objects. Our code examples use [the async/await pattern](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/JavaScript/Asynchronous/Async_await) to ease readability. The code is wrapped in an unnamed async arrow function which is invoking itself. ```js (async () => { // Start of async arrow function // Function code // ... })(); // End of the function and () to invoke itself ``` ## First script In our first script, we will navigate to `whatsmyuseragent.org` and take a screenshot in WebKit. ```js const { webkit } = require('playwright'); (async () => { const browser = await webkit.launch(); const page = await browser.newPage(); await page.goto('http://whatsmyuseragent.org/'); await page.screenshot({ path: `example.png` }); await browser.close(); })(); ``` By default, Playwright runs the browsers in headless mode. To see the browser UI, pass the `headless: false` flag while launching the browser. You can also use `slowMo` to slow down execution. ```js firefox.launch({ headless: false, slowMo: 50 }); ``` ## Record scripts [Playwright CLI](https://www.npmjs.com/package/playwright-cli) can be used to record user interactions and generate JavaScript code. ``` npx playwright-cli codegen wikipedia.org ``` ## TypeScript support Playwright includes built-in support for TypeScript. Type definitions will be imported automatically. It is recommended to use type-checking to improve the IDE experience. ### In JavaScript Add the following to the top of your JavaScript file to get type-checking in VS Code or WebStorm. ```js //@ts-check // ... ``` Alternatively, you can use JSDoc to set types for variables. ```js /** @type {import('playwright').Page} */ let page; ``` ### In TypeScript TypeScript support will work out-of-the-box. Types can also be imported explicitly. ```ts let page: import('playwright').Page; ``` ## System requirements Playwright requires Node.js version 10.17 or above. The browser binaries for Chromium, Firefox and WebKit work across the 3 platforms (Windows, macOS, Linux): * **Windows**: Works with Windows and Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL). * **macOS**: Requires 10.14 or above. * **Linux**: Depending on your Linux distribution, you might need to install additional dependencies to run the browsers. * Firefox requires Ubuntu 18.04+ * For Ubuntu 18.04, the additional dependencies are defined in [our Docker image](docker/Dockerfile.bionic), which is based on Ubuntu.