Testing-library is a collection of tools for testing web application user interfaces, focused on creating reliable and maintainable tests by emphasizing user behavior. The main advantage of testing-library is its focus on interaction with interface elements. And in testplane, you can use the element search methods provided by the testing-library itself.
- Install the npm package @testplane/testing-library:
npm i -D @testplane/testing-library- Include it in the Testplane config in the prepareBrowsersection:
// .testplane.conf.js
const { setupBrowser } = require("@testplane/testing-library");
module.exports = {
    prepareBrowser(browser) {
        setupBrowser(browser);
    },
    // other Testplane settings...
};If you are using TypeScript and experiencing issues with testing-library types, you may add the following line to your tsconfig.json
{
    "compilerOptions": {
        "types": [
            "@testplane/testing-library"
        ]
    }
}After configuring, you will be able to use the search by selectors from testing-library, as described in the official documentation. For example, searching for an element by its text:
it("example", async ({ browser }) => {
    await browser.url("https://github.com/");
    const newRepoButton = await browser.getByText("New");
    await newRepoButton.click();
});
This feature will also be available in the context of found elements:
it("example", async ({ browser }) => {
    await browser.url("https://github.com/");
    const sidebar = await browser.$(".dashboard-sidebar");
    const newRepoButton = await sidebar.getByText("New");
    await newRepoButton.click();
});Disclaimer:
All testing-library selectors return a promise and cannot be chained (like browser.getByText().click() — this is not possible).
Each testing-library selector must be awaited before performing any actions on it.