BrowserType provides methods to launch a specific browser instance or connect to an existing one. The following is a typical example of using Playwright to drive automation:| playwright.dev
This API is used for the Web API testing. You can use it to trigger API endpoints, configure micro-services, prepare environment or the service to your e2e test.| playwright.dev
A Browser is created via browserType.launch(). An example of using a [Browser] to create a [Page]:| playwright.dev
[Work in progress]| wiki.mozilla.org
Policy Templates for Firefox| policy-templates
Locators are the central piece of Playwright's auto-waiting and retry-ability. In a nutshell, locators represent a way to find element(s) on the page at any moment. A locator can be created with the page.locator() method.| playwright.dev
Page provides methods to interact with a single tab in a Browser], or an [extension background page in Chromium. One [Browser] instance might have multiple [Page] instances.| playwright.dev
BrowserContexts provide a way to operate multiple independent browser sessions.| playwright.dev
Programming languages all have built-in data structures, but these often differ from one language to another. This article attempts to list the built-in data structures available in JavaScript and what properties they have. These can be used to build other data structures.| MDN Web Docs
The Promise object represents the eventual completion (or failure) of an asynchronous operation and its resulting value.| MDN Web Docs
Service workers essentially act as proxy servers that sit between web applications, the browser, and the network (when available). They are intended, among other things, to enable the creation of effective offline experiences, intercept network requests, and take appropriate action based on whether the network is available, and update assets residing on the server. They will also allow access to push notifications and background sync APIs.| MDN Web Docs
HTTP provides a general framework for access control and authentication. This page is an introduction to the HTTP framework for authentication, and shows how to restrict access to your server using the HTTP "Basic" scheme.| MDN Web Docs
The Configuration Editor (about:config page) lets you view, change, or reset advanced preference settings in Firefox. Learn more.| support.mozilla.org
-- ⊗| peter.sh
Buffers and character encodings#| nodejs.org