Safari is a widely used browser, second only to Google Chrome, with close to 20 percent total market share. It…
Safari is a widely used browser, second only to Google Chrome, with close to 20 percent total market share. It only makes sense that you can run end-to-end tests for your web applications on it. But to do this, you need SafariDriver, which allows Selenium tests on mobile iOS and macOS.
This article is a loose tutorial featuring the step-by-step process a QA engineer must take to run Selenium tests in Safari using SafariDriver.
Before we get into the details of running Selenium tests on Safari, you should know a few things: Apple stopped supporting its Safari browser on Windows machines. So you’ll need a Mac running the latest version of Safari, which now includes SafariDriver (actually, Safari v10+).
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