Index Property (Job Objects)

Applies to TestComplete 15.31, last modified on March 17, 2022
The Network Suite functionality is deprecated. We don’t recommend using it for distributed testing. Consider using a CI/CD system for managing distributed tests. See Migrating Distributed Tests to CI/CD Systems for details. In case you need to run web tests on multiple environments in parallel, you can also try using your project’s Execution Plan.

Description

The Index property returns the index (starting from 0) of the given job in the network suite's job collection (see Jobs Object). This index can be used to identify the job in this collection via the Jobs.Items property. To learn the number of jobs in this collection, use the Jobs.Count property.

Declaration

JobObj.Index

Read-Only Property Integer
JobObj An expression, variable or parameter that specifies a reference to a Job object

Applies To

The property is applied to the following object:

Property Value

An integer value denotes the zero-based index that the given job has in the job collection of the network suite.

Example

The code below obtains a collection of jobs that belong to a network suite and then posts the name and index of each job to the test log.

JavaScript, JScript

function JobsNamesExample()
{
  // Obtains information about the jobs
  var Jobs = NetworkSuite.Jobs;
  // Obtains the number of the jobs that belong to the network suite
  var Num = Jobs.Count;
  
  // Iterates through the jobs
  for (var i = 0; i < Num; i++)
  {
    // Obtains the current job
    var Job = Jobs.Items(i);
    var Index = Job.Index;
    var Name = Job.Name;
    // Posts the job's name and index to the test log
    Log.Message(Index + " job's name is: " + Name);
  }
}

Python

def JobsNamesExample():
  # Obtains information about the jobs
  Jobs = NetworkSuite.Jobs
  # Obtains the number of the jobs that belong to the network suite
  Num = Jobs.Count
  # Iterates through the jobs
  for i in range(0, Num):
    # Obtains the current job
    Job = Jobs.Items[i]
    Index = Job.Index
    Name = Job.Name
    # Posts the job's name and index to the test log
    Log.Message(str(Index) + " job's name is: " + Name)

VBScript

Sub JobsNamesExample()

  ' Obtains information about the jobs
  Set Jobs = NetworkSuite.Jobs
  ' Obtains the number of the jobs that belong to the network suite
  Num = Jobs.Count
  
  ' Iterates through the jobs
  For i = 0 to (Num - 1)
    ' Obtains the current job
    Set Job = Jobs.Items(i)
    Index = Job.Index
    Name = Job.Name
    ' Posts the job's name and index to the test log
    Log.Message(Index & " job's name is: " & Name)
  Next
  
End Sub

DelphiScript

function JobsNamesExample;
var Jobs, Num, i, Job, Name;
begin

  // Obtains information about the jobs
  Jobs := NetworkSuite.Jobs;
  // Obtains the number of the jobs that belong to the network suite
  Num := Jobs.Count;
  
  // Iterates through the jobs
  for i := 0 to (Num - 1) do
  begin
    // Obtains the current job
    Job := Jobs.Items[i];
    Index := Job.Index;
    Name := Job.Name;
    // Posts the job's name and index to the test log
    Log.Message(Index + ' job''s name is: ' + Name);
  end;

end;

C++Script, C#Script

function JobsNamesExample()
{
  // Obtains information about the jobs
  var Jobs = NetworkSuite["Jobs"];
  // Obtains the number of the jobs that belong to the network suite
  var Num = Jobs["Count"];
  
  // Iterates through the jobs
  for (var i = 0; i < Num; i++)
  {
    // Obtains the current job
    var Job = Jobs["Items"](i);
    var Index = Job["Index"];
    var Name = Job["Name"];
    // Posts the job's name and index to the test log
    Log["Message"](Index + " job's name is: " + Name);
  }
}

See Also

Distributed Testing
Name Property
Jobs Object
Count Property
Items Property

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