Home > Designing, Others > Playwright

Playwright

January 24th, 2020 Leave a comment Go to comments

So Microsoft launches a Node-based browser automation project called Playwright. It allows you to spin up a headless version of a browser and control it. Go here! Click something! Take a screenshot! That kind of stuff. Particularly useful for testing.

It’s just like Google’s Puppeteer, only instead of being Chrome-only, it also “works” in Firefox and Safari.

The drama started immediately.

The launch tweet from Andrey Lushnikov (who’s Twitter bio is “former TL @ Chrome Puppeteer, former eng @ Chrome DevTools”), is responded to by Sam Sneddon who questions the cross-browser compatibility. Apparently that compatibility comes via very large patches to those other browsers which some feel are a little house-of-cards-esque and will never actually land in those other browsers, especially since there are competing efforts like puppeteer-firefox.

It’s fairly obvious that the original team from Google behind Puppeteer kinda, uhhhh, made their way over to Microsoft and re-did the work over there. A little bird tells me Google is proper pissed about it.

I don’t have any other inside knowledge here, but it doesn’t seem to make Microsoft look very good here. For a company that has had so much success with an open-source strategy, hiring away a team to build a directly competing alternate open-source project without much cooperation from the other open-source projects it integrates with isn’t a great look. At the same time, having a working project that allows cross-browser headless control is pretty rad.

Feel free to enlighten me if I have it all wrong.

Related: As I understand it, Cypress doesn’t use either project, but has their own thing, and is close to Firefox support as well.

Direct Link to ArticlePermalink

The post Playwright appeared first on CSS-Tricks.

Categories: Designing, Others Tags:
  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.
You must be logged in to post a comment.