I've searched around for the answer to this and found lots of much
more complicated questions, but none that gave me insight enough to
figure this one out.
What I'm doing:
1- open a page with a number that will probably be large
2- get the X Path to where that number is and store it to a variable
3- do a javascript to compare the above stored variable to see if it is bigger than 10, if so, set a new varaible to true; else false (because that is the default value)
4- verify the variable in #3 is true
Sounds simple enough, no?
Where it goes wrong:
At step 3, comparing the variable from step #2 to 10 isn't allowed, at least not the way I'm writing it.
Why?
Details:
<tr>
<td>open</td>
<td>http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=selenium+verifyEval</td>
<td></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>store</td>
<td>/html/body/div[5]/div/p/b[3]</td>
<td>resultCount</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>storeEval</td>
<td>var isMoreThan10 = new Boolean(); isMoreThan10 = (resultCount > 10);</td>
<td>isMoreThan10</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>verifyExpression</td>
<td>${isMoreThan10}</td>
<td>true</td>
</tr>
I just thought of one possible workaround: Exapnd the javascript code to get the value there & assign it to a variable there so I'll be more likely to be able to use that variable in the javascript. Not sure exactly how that would be done- anyone wanna help with that?
But surely there is be a better way, isn't there? I must be able to assign a value to a variable in Selenium, then in the next line use that variable in a javascript, right?