Description
An object can have one or more child objects. For instance, processes are children of the Sys
object and windows are children of processes. The FindChild
method searches for a child object with the specified values of the specified properties.
The FindChild
method is analogue to Find
. The difference between them is that Find
searches in the object and its child objects, while FindChild
only searches in child objects.
Declaration
TestObj.FindChild(PropNames, PropValues, Depth, RefreshTree)
TestObj | A variable, parameter or expression that specifies a reference to one of the objects listed in the Applies To section | |||
PropNames | [in] | Required | Variant | |
PropValues | [in] | Required | Variant | |
Depth | [in] | Optional | Integer | Default value: 0 |
RefreshTree | [in] | Optional | Boolean | Default value: True |
Result | Object |
Applies To
All processes, windows, controls and onscreen objects.
View Mode
This method is available in the Object Browser panel and in other panels and dialogs in both Basic and Advanced view modes.
Parameters
The method has the following parameters:
PropNames
A property or an array of properties by which the method will search for an object.
You can view the list of object properties and their values in the Object Browser. See Exploring Object Properties and Methods in the Object Browser.
For web applications and hybrid mobile applications, you can also specify names of native web attributes (since TestComplete treats native web attributes as object properties). See Accessing Native Web Attributes and Methods for details.
PropValues
A value of a single property or an array of values of properties that the PropNames parameter specifies.
Values can contain asterisk (*) or question mark (?) wildcards, or regular expressions. The asterisk (*) wildcard corresponds to a string of any length (including an empty string), the question mark corresponds to any single character (including none). To specify more complicated parts of the value, use regular expressions. For information on them, see the Remarks section below.
Values can be case-sensitive or case-insensitive depending on the Use case-sensitive parameters setting of your current project. Regular expression patterns are always case-insensitive.
You can view the list of object properties and their values in the Object Browser. See Exploring Object Properties and Methods in the Object Browser.
Depth
An integer value that sets the maximum level of the object’s hierarchy that the method will reach while searching for the specified object.
If Depth is less than or equal to 0 (0 is the default value), the method will search for the specified object among immediate children of the testObj
object.
If Depth is 1, the method will search among child objects of the testObj
object and their child objects. If Depths is 2, the method will search among the testObj
object’s child objects, their child and grandchild objects, and so on.
To search in the whole hierarchy of the testObj
object’s child objects, use a Depth value that is greater than the number of child levels in the hierarchy, for example, 2000.
RefreshTree
TestComplete performs the search in the cached copy of the object hierarchy, which may not correspond to the actual hierarchy of objects in the tested application. This may happen, for instance, if the actions that precedes the search caused changes in the application state. The RefreshTree parameter lets you specify what TestComplete should do if no object matching the search criteria was found in the cached object tree. If it is True (default), TestComplete will refresh the cached object tree and perform the search once again. If it is False, TestComplete will not refresh the object tree and will return a stub object indicating that the search failed.
Result Value
The object that has the specified values of the specified properties. If no object matching the search criteria was found, the FindChild
method returns a stub object that only contains the Exists
property equal to False. So, you can check the Exists
property value of the returned object to determine whether the search was successful.
Remarks
-
As an alternative to using the
FindChild
method, to get a needed tested object, you can use Name Mapping. Specify the properties by which your tested object will be searched and store the object together with its search criteria in the Name Mapping repository for later use. To learn more, see Name Mapping. -
We do not recommend that you use the
VisibleOnScreen
property in a search condition of the method. It may take much time for TestComplete to get the value of this property, and using it for searching for objects may decrease the test performance significantly. -
To call the
FindChild
method in a keyword test, you can use the Call Object Method or Run Code Snippet operation. A possible alternative is to use the Find Object operation. -
The project property Object search strategy controls whether the method uses depth-first or breadth-first search.
-
When the
FindChild
method is used to search for an object by its name (theName
property), TestComplete ignores spaces and the following characters in the name:( ) [ ] . , " '
This behavior is intended to eliminate differences between the object name syntax in different scripting languages during the search. This way, for example,
FindChild
can search for the Notepad process by any of the following names:Process("notepad")
(VBScript, JavaScript, JScript and Python syntax),Process('notepad')
(DelphiScript syntax) and["Process"]("notepad")
(C++Script and C#Script syntax).In general, it is not recommended to use the
Name
property withFindChild
; consider using other properties instead. For example,Name
is a complex value that is composed of other properties, such asWndClass
orWndCaption
, so you can search by a combination of these individual properties. -
To obtain an object by its name, you can also use the following techniques:
-
If you know the object name, you can refer to the object directly by this name:
JavaScript, JScript
var wndNotepad = Sys.Process("notepad").Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad");
Python
wndNotepad = Sys.Process("notepad").Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad")
VBScript
Set wndNotepad = Sys.Process("notepad").Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad")
DelphiScript
wndNotepad := Sys.Process('notepad').Window('Notepad', 'Untitled - Notepad');
C++Script, C#Script
var wndNotepad = Sys["Process"]("notepad")["Window"]("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad");
-
If an object name is specified as a string in your test (for example, if it is stored in a script variable), you can get the object by "evaluating" the string holding its name. For this purpose, you can use the following functions:
eval
in JavaScript, JScript, Python, C#Script and C++Script,Eval
in VBScript andEvaluate
in DelphiScript. The following example demonstrates this approach:JavaScript, JScript
function NotepadTest()
{
var strObjName, p, wndNotepad;
strObjName = "Window(\"Notepad\", \"* - Notepad\")";
// Store the parent object to a variable
p = Sys.Process("notepad");
// Obtain the object by its Name property
// p is the name of the variable that holds the parent object
wndNotepad = eval("p." + strObjName);
Log.Picture(wndNotepad, "Notepad window", wndNotepad.FullName);
}Python
def NotepadTest(): strObjName = "Window(\"Notepad\", \"* - Notepad\")" # Store the parent object to a variable p = Sys.Process("notepad") # Obtain the object by its Name property # p is the name of the variable that holds the parent object wndNotepad = eval("p." + strObjName) Log.Picture(wndNotepad, "Notepad window", wndNotepad.FullName)
VBScript
Sub NotepadTest
Dim strObjName, p, wndNotepad
strObjName = "Window(""Notepad"", ""* - Notepad"")"
' Store the parent object to a variable
Set p = Sys.Process("notepad")
' Obtain the object by its Name property
' p is the name of the variable that holds the parent object
Set wndNotepad = Eval("p." & strObjName)
Log.Picture wndNotepad, "Notepad window", wndNotepad.FullName
End SubDelphiScript
procedure NotepadTest;
var strObjName, p, wndNotepad;
begin
strObjName := 'Window(''Notepad'', ''* - Notepad'')';
// Store the parent object to a variable
p := Sys.Process('notepad');
// Obtain the object by its Name property
// p is the name of the variable that holds the parent object
wndNotepad := Evaluate('p.' + strObjName);
Log.Picture(wndNotepad, 'Notepad window', wndNotepad.FullName);
end;C++Script, C#Script
function NotepadTest()
{
var strObjName, p, wndNotepad;
strObjName = "[\"Window\"](\"Notepad\", \"* - Notepad\")";
// Store the parent object to a variable
p = Sys["Process"]("notepad");
// Obtain the object by its Name property
// p is the name of the variable that holds the parent object
wndNotepad = eval("p" + strObjName);
Log.Picture(wndNotepad, "Notepad window", wndNotepad.FullName);
}
-
-
Regular expressions should start with "
regexp:
", for example:obj = parent.Find("PropName", "regexp:gr[ae]y", 5)
Regular expression patterns use the standard TestComplete syntax, but have the following specifics:
-
All patterns are case-insensitive. For example,
"regexp:gr[ae]y"
will match both "gray" and "GRAY". -
Patterns search for partial matches. For example,
regexp:notepad
matches both "notepad" and "notepad++". To search for an exact match, use the ^ and $ anchors, for example "regexp:^notepad$".
Native regular expressions of the scripting languages are not supported.
-
Example
The following code searches for a visible window with the caption “Font style” among all child objects of the Notepad process. The window belongs to the Font dialog that Notepad shows when you select Format | Font from Notepad’s main menu.
JavaScript, JScript
function Test()
{
var PropArray, ValuesArray, p, w;
// Creates arrays of property names and values
PropArray = new Array("WndCaption", "Visible");
ValuesArray = new Array("Font st&yle:", true);
// Searches for the window
p = Sys.Process("Notepad");
w = p.FindChild(PropArray, ValuesArray, 5);
// Processes the search results
if (w.Exists)
Log.Message(w.FullName);
else
Log.Error("The object was not found.");
}
Python
def Test():
# Creates arrays of property names and values
PropArray = ["WndCaption", "Visible"]
ValuesArray = ["Font st&yle:", True]
# Searches for the window
p = Sys.Process("Notepad")
w = p.FindChild(PropArray, ValuesArray, 5)
# Processes the search results
if (w.Exists):
Log.Message(w.FullName)
else:
Log.Error("The object was not found.")
VBScript
Sub Test
Dim PropArray, ValuesArray, p, w
' Creates arrays of property names and values
PropArray = Array("WndCaption", "Visible")
ValuesArray = Array("Font st&yle:", True)
' Searches for the window
Set p = Sys.Process("Notepad")
Set w = p.FindChild(PropArray, ValuesArray, 5)
' Processes the search results
If w.Exists Then
Log.Message w.FullName
Else
Log.Error "The object was not found."
End If
End Sub
DelphiScript
procedure Test;
var PropArray, ValuesArray, p, w;
begin
// Creates arrays of property names and values
PropArray := ['WndCaption', 'Visible'];
ValuesArray := ['Font st&yle:', true];
// Searches for the window
p := Sys.Process('Notepad');
w := p.FindChild(PropArray, ValuesArray, 1000);
// Processes the search results
if w.Exists then
Log.Message(w.FullName)
else
Log.Error('The object was not found.');
end;
C++Script, C#Script
function Test()
{
var PropArray, ValuesArray, p, w;
// Creates arrays of property names and values
PropArray = new Array("WndCaption", "Visible");
ValuesArray = new Array("Font st&yle:", true);
// Searches for the window
p = Sys["Process"]("Notepad");
w = p["FindChild"](PropArray, ValuesArray, 5);
// Processes the search results
if (w["Exists"])
Log["Message"](w["FullName"]);
else
Log["Error"]("The object was not found.");
}
See Also
FindAllChildren Method
Find Method
FindAll Method
FindId Method
FindEx Method
FindChildEx Method
Child Method
WaitChild Method