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iOS Predicates

NOTE: iOS predicates are usable via -ios predicate string and -ios class chain locator strategies

NOTE: It is worth looking at NSPredicate Cheat Sheet.

Native predicate search strategy (powered by Apple XCTest) provides much flexibility and is much faster than XPath. Predicates can be used to restrict a set of elements to select only those for which some condition evaluates to true.

'-ios predicate string' example:

// java
appiumDriver.findElements(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("isVisible == 1"));

'-ios class chain' example:

// java
appiumDriver.findElements(AppiumBy.iOSClassChain("**/XCUIElementTypeWindow[`label LIKE '*yolo*'`]"));

The first example would select all visible elements on the page and the second one, - all elements of type XCUIElementTypeWindow whose label contains yolo. Class chain queries allow to create much more complicated search expressions and may contain multiple predicates. Read Class Chain Queries Construction Rules for more details on how to build such queries.

Basic Comparisons

= , == - The left-hand expression is equal to the right-hand expression:

// java
appiumDriver.findElements(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("label == 'Olivia'"));

// same in Xpath:
appiumDriver.findElements(AppiumBy.xpath("//*[@label = 'Olivia']"));

>= , => - The left-hand expression is greater than or equal to the right-hand expression.

<= , =< - The left-hand expression is less than or equal to the right-hand expression.

> - The left-hand expression is greater than the right-hand expression.

< - The left-hand expression is less than the right-hand expression.

!= , <> - The left-hand expression is not equal to the right-hand expression.

BETWEEN - The left-hand expression is between, or equal to either of, the values specified in the right-hand side. The right-hand side is a two value array (an array is required to specify order) giving upper and lower bounds. For example, 1 BETWEEN { 0 , 33 }, or $INPUT BETWEEN { $LOWER, $UPPER }. In Objective-C, you could create a BETWEEN predicate as shown in the following example:

appiumDriver.findElements(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("rect.x BETWEEN { 1, 100 }"));

This creates a predicate that matches all elements whole left top coordinate is in range between 1 and 100.

Boolean Value Predicates

TRUEPREDICATE - A predicate that always evaluates to TRUE .

FALSEPREDICATE - A predicate that always evaluates to FALSE.

Basic Compound Predicates

AND , && - Logical AND.

OR , || - Logical OR.

NOT , ! - Logical NOT.

String Comparisons

String comparisons are by default case and diacritic sensitive. You can modify an operator using the key characters c and d within square braces to specify case and diacritic insensitivity respectively, for example `value BEGINSWITH[cd] 'bar'

BEGINSWITH - The left-hand expression begins with the right-hand expression.

appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("type == 'XCUIElementTypeButton' AND name BEGINSWITH 'results toggle'"));

// same in Xpath:
appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.xpath("//XCUIElementTypeButton[starts-with(@name, 'results toggle')]"));

CONTAINS - The left-hand expression contains the right-hand expression.

appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("type == 'XCUIElementCollectionView' AND name CONTAINS 'opera'"));

// same in Xpath:
appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.xpath("//XCUIElementCollectionView[contains(@name, 'opera')]"));

ENDSWITH - The left-hand expression ends with the right-hand expression.

LIKE - The left hand expression equals the right-hand expression: ? and * are allowed as wildcard characters, where ? matches 1 character and * matches 0 or more characters. In Mac OS X v10.4, wildcard characters do not match newline characters.

appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("name LIKE '*Total: $*'"));

// XPath1 does not have an alternative to the above expression

MATCHES - The left hand expression equals the right hand expression using a regex -style comparison according to ICU v3 (for more details see the ICU User Guide for Regular Expressions).

appiumDriver.findElement(AppiumBy.iOSNsPredicateString("value MATCHES '.*of [1-9]'"));

// XPath1 does not have an alternative to the above expression

Aggregate Operations

IN - Equivalent to an SQL IN operation, the left-hand side must appear in the collection specified by the right-hand side. For example, name IN { 'Ben', 'Melissa', 'Matthew' } . The collection may be an array, a set, or a dictionary—in the case of a dictionary, its values are used.

Identifiers

C style identifier - Any C style identifier that is not a reserved word.

#symbol - Used to escape a reserved word into a user identifier.

[\]{octaldigit}{3} - Used to escape an octal number ( \ followed by 3 octal digits).

[\][xX]{hexdigit}{2} - Used to escape a hex number ( \x or \X followed by 2 hex digits).

[\][uU]{hexdigit}{4} - Used to escape a Unicode number ( \u or \U followed by 4 hex digits).

Literals

Single and double quotes produce the same result, but they do not terminate each other. For example, "abc" and 'abc' are identical, whereas "a'b'c" is equivalent to a space-separated concatenation of a, 'b', c.

FALSE , NO - Logical false.

TRUE , YES - Logical true.

NULL , NIL - A null value.

SELF - Represents the object being evaluated.

"text" - A character string.

'text' - A character string.

Comma-separated literal array - For example, { 'comma', 'separated', 'literal', 'array' } .

Standard integer and fixed-point notations - For example, 1 , 27 , 2.71828 , 19.75 .

Floating-point notation with exponentiation - For example, 9.2e-5 .

0x - Prefix used to denote a hexadecimal digit sequence.

0o - Prefix used to denote an octal digit sequence.

0b - Prefix used to denote a binary digit sequence.

Reserved Words

The following words are reserved:

AND, OR, IN, NOT, ALL, ANY, SOME, NONE, LIKE, CASEINSENSITIVE, CI, MATCHES, CONTAINS, BEGINSWITH, ENDSWITH, BETWEEN, NULL, NIL, SELF, TRUE, YES, FALSE, NO, FIRST, LAST, SIZE, ANYKEY, SUBQUERY, CAST, TRUEPREDICATE, FALSEPREDICATE

Available Attributes

Check the Element Attributes document to know all element attribute names and types that are available for usage in predicate locators.