extension ExtPose

Automation Inspector (Extension) (delisted)

CRX id

magknkflhkbbjaalinnipadaihkbghoc-

Description from extension meta

Developer tool for exercising the Chrome Automation API

Image from store Automation Inspector (Extension)
Description from store Developer tool for exercising the Chrome Automation API Automation Inspector An inspection tool for Chrome Automation API The Chrome Automation API is an experimental accessibility API that allows developers to access the automation tree and events for the browser. The tree resembles the DOM tree, but only exposes the semantic structure of a page. It can be used to programmatically interact with a page by examining names, roles, and states, listening for events, and performing actions on nodes. One of Chrome Automation's main purposes is to enable the development of assistive technologies written in JavaScript, for Chrome OS. This is similar to how MSAA, IA2 and UIA are used on Windows, and AX Accessibility is used for OS X. It can also be used by extensions, but because it is experimental, it is currently available only on the dev channel and to internal assistive technologies such as ChromeVox. Automation Inspector is used to exercise the Automation API, to inspect the entire Chrome OS desktop, or to inspect a specific browser tab. This tool is mainly useful for the following types of people: Developers/QA working on Chrome accessibility support Developers/QA working on assistive technologies for Chrome OS Developers/QA working on accessibility of web applications looking (less so) Installation Chrome tabs: you can inspect individual browser tabs on any OS. To do this, install Google Chrome Canary and then install Automation Inspector as an extension. Chrome OS desktop: to inspect the Chrome OS desktop, you must switch your Chrome OS to the Dev Channel, and then install Automation Inspector as an app. See the Automation Inspector app in Chrome Web Store. The github project for Automation Inspector is here: https://github.com/google/automation-inspector Usage tips Finding a node The find field is very powerful, and can be used in a number of ways: Plain text search: this will search rows for the visible text shown. This can be slow on complex pages, it it will cause the entire page to be loaded a bit at a time. /RegEx/ search: include slashes to search for rows with matching visible text. Slow on complex pages (similiar to plain text search). ${selector}: use jQuery-like format, which is a CSS selector wrapped inside $(), to find a node matching a given selector. This will currently return only the first item. This method uses the Automation API's domQuerySelector method. For example, use $('#my-special-element') to find the nearest automation node to that element. {JSON FindParams}: this executes the Automation API's findAll method with syntax similar to FindParams. However, this method accepts valid JSON syntax only. You must provide strings rather than constants. For example, use { "state" : {"disabled": true }} rather than { state: { StateType.disabled: true }}.

Statistics

Installs
987 history
Category
Rating
0.0 (0 votes)
Last update / version
2017-11-17 / 0.1.7
Listing languages
en-US

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