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For QA Wolf we created a separate GitHub OAuth app just to avoid this UX bug


Have you tried Playwright? It is a fork of Puppeteer that adds auto-waiting


No! Thanks for pointing it out.


Playwright is the Microsoft one yeah?

That's the best one. Of all the browser automators, playwright is the best. Never had a wait fail or anything like that. maybe I just got lucky, but if you're looking to do something with browser automation, try Playwright first, then look elsewhere


My friend has been working on an open source wysiwyg for markdown which is worth checking out: https://opencodex.dev/demo


Even Bozeman, MT has closed its restaurants, cafes, and bars.


Hey thanks for checking it out and for the feedback! I will make sure we add the --ts flag in the next release.

You can specify the directory with `npx qawolf create --rootDir=tests/integration` let me know if that works for you?


Hi HN, we have been building this open source tool to make creating browser tests easier. It converts your browser actions to Playwright/Jest code and sets up CI with one command. We would love any feedback!


This is a very cool concept! It would be useful for CLI commands like `npm test someSpecificTest`.



I have had the same experience using Selenium but not with Chrome Dev Tools Protocol. However you still need a stable environment, trustable selectors, and automatic waiting logic to have stable e2e web tests.

I am working on an open source library that generates Playwright tests (uses Chrome Dev Tools protocol) and I hope we can prove you wrong about getting UI tests working reliably. https://github.com/qawolf/qawolf


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They have a nanodegree class that is much better. I have been taking it the past two months and I highly recommend it https://www.udacity.com/course/deep-learning-nanodegree-foun...


What areas have they improved in?

I was really disappointed by multiple Udacity courses; not saying they can't pull it off, but I've been burned enough by Udacity that I wouldn't consider paying for any courses from them at this point.


Yeah, I took most of the "AI for self driving cars" course taught by Sebastian Thrun himself, and was torn.

He's no doubt an extraordinarily competent researcher in his field, but he was clearly a beginner to Python (either that or he didn't care), and the Python code (while bringing the concepts across) was so poor as to be distracting.


I have watched a lot of Siraj's YouTube videos. He is a very entertaining speaker, but never felt like I actually learned a ton. Is the nanodegree on Udacity better?


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