Java's FluentWait in Python
I believe you can do this with Python, however it isn't packaged as simply as a FluentWait class. Some of this was covered in the documentation you provided by not extensively.
The WebDriverWait class has optional arguments for timeout, poll_frequency, and ignored_exceptions. So you could supply it there. Then combine it with an Expected Condition to wait for elements for appear, be clickable, etc... Here is an example:
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.by import By
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import WebDriverWait
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC
from selenium.common.exceptions import *
driver = webdriver.Firefox()
# Load some webpage
wait = WebDriverWait(driver, 10, poll_frequency=1, ignored_exceptions=[ElementNotVisibleException, ElementNotSelectableException])
element = wait.until(EC.element_to_be_clickable((By.XPATH, "//div")))
Obviously you can combine the wait/element into one statement but I figured this way you can see where this is implemented.
iChar's answer covers how to use WebDriverWait
in Python to do what FluentWait
does in Java. Some aspects of the question were left unaddressed though:
In other words, [
FluentWait
] is something more than implicit and explicit wait
No. As of version 2.42.x of Selenium, there are only two kinds of waits that Selenium implements: implicit and explicit. FluentWait
is not something additional to these two kinds of wait. It is just an explicit wait.
Is there anything similar in python selenium package, or should I implement it myself?
The only thing I can think of that is missing from Python's WebDriverWait
implementation that FluentWait
(and WebDriverWait
, by extension) has, is this:
[
FluentWait
(and, by extension,WebDriverWait
)] may have its timeout and polling interval configured on the fly.
[Quoted from this.]
The WebDriverWait
class in Python is designed in such a way that its configuration values are set once and for all when it is created. FluentWait
allows its configuration to be changed after creation. So a single FluentWait
object (or any WebDriverWait
in Java) could be reused to wait for different conditions with different polling frequencies. In Python, you'd have to create a new WebDriverWait
object to use a different polling frequency.
So there is something the Python implementation does not provide but I would not consider this significant enough to warrant an implementation.