IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
194.182.163.117 | ch | 3128 | 39 minutes ago |
50.168.72.115 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.217.226.47 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
103.216.49.233 | kh | 8080 | 39 minutes ago |
211.128.96.206 | 80 | 39 minutes ago | |
122.151.54.147 | au | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.223.246.237 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.174.7.152 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
23.247.136.245 | sg | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.239.72.18 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
185.10.129.14 | ru | 3128 | 39 minutes ago |
203.19.38.114 | cn | 1080 | 39 minutes ago |
50.175.212.74 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
201.148.32.162 | 80 | 39 minutes ago | |
41.207.187.178 | tg | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
176.9.239.181 | de | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.168.72.118 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
50.202.75.26 | us | 80 | 39 minutes ago |
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To use Selenium in an Android Studio project, you can follow these steps
1. Create a New Android Studio Project
Open Android Studio and create a new Android project or open an existing project where you want to use Selenium.
2. Add Dependencies
Open your app's build.gradle file.
Add the Selenium dependency to the dependencies section. You can find the latest version on the Maven Repository.
dependencies {
// Other dependencies...
implementation 'org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-java:3.141.59' // Use the latest version
}
Click "Sync Now" in the bar that appears at the top of Android Studio to sync the project and download the Selenium library.
3. Use Selenium in Your Code
You can now use Selenium in your Java code. For example, you can create a WebDriver instance and interact with a web page.
import org.openqa.selenium.WebDriver;
import org.openqa.selenium.chrome.ChromeDriver;
public class MainActivity {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Set the path to the ChromeDriver executable
System.setProperty("webdriver.chrome.driver", "/path/to/chromedriver");
// Create a ChromeDriver instance
WebDriver driver = new ChromeDriver();
// Example: Open Google and print the title
driver.get("https://www.google.com");
System.out.println("Title: " + driver.getTitle());
// Close the browser window
driver.quit();
}
}
Make sure to replace "/path/to/chromedriver" with the actual path to the ChromeDriver executable. You can download ChromeDriver from the official site.
4. Configure WebDriver
Depending on the WebDriver you are using (e.g., ChromeDriver, GeckoDriver for Firefox), you may need to configure the path to the WebDriver executable. Set the system property before creating the WebDriver instance.
5. Handling WebDriver in Android
Note that running Selenium directly on Android devices is not straightforward due to differences in the architecture and limitations. If you need to automate interactions with Android apps, you might want to look into tools like Appium, which is designed specifically for mobile app automation.
Remember that Selenium is primarily designed for web automation, and using it for Android app automation may not be the best choice. For native Android app automation, consider tools like Appium or Espresso. If you are working with web views within Android apps, you can still use Selenium for those parts.
To move the mouse using Selenium with C#, you can use the IJavaScriptExecutor interface to execute JavaScript commands that control the mouse movements on the web page. Here's an example of how to move the mouse to a specific element:
using OpenQA.Selenium;
using OpenQA.Selenium.Chrome;
using OpenQA.Selenium.Support.UI;
using System;
namespace SeleniumMouseMoveExample
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Set up the WebDriver
IWebDriver driver = new ChromeDriver();
driver.Manage().Window.Maximize();
// Navigate to the target web page
driver.Navigate().GoToUrl("https://www.example.com");
// Wait for the page to load
WebDriverWait wait = new WebDriverWait(driver, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(10));
IWebElement element = wait.Until(x => x.Id == "target-element");
// Move the mouse to the element
((IJavaScriptExecutor)driver).ExecuteScript(
"arguments[0].scrollIntoView();", element);
((IJavaScriptExecutor)driver).ExecuteScript(
"arguments[0].style.border='2px solid red';", element);
((IJavaScriptExecutor)driver).ExecuteScript(
"window.getSelection().empty();", element);
((IJavaScriptExecutor)driver).ExecuteScript(
"var event = document.createEvent('MouseEvents');" +
"event.initMouseEvent('mousemove', true, false, window, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, false, false, false, false, 0, null);" +
"arguments[0].dispatchEvent(event);", element);
// Perform any additional actions as needed
// Close the browser
driver.Quit();
}
}
}
In this example, we first set up the WebDriver and navigate to the target web page. We then use the WebDriverWait class to wait for a specific element to load on the page. After that, we use the IJavaScriptExecutor interface to execute JavaScript commands that move the mouse to the element.
The scrollIntoView() method scrolls the element into view, the style.border property is used to highlight the element, and the window.getSelection().empty() method clears any existing selection. Finally, we create a custom mouse event using the createEvent method and dispatch it to the element using the dispatchEvent method.
Remember to replace "https://www.example.com" and "target-element" with the actual URL and element ID or selector of the web page and element you want to interact with.
In Windows, proxy settings for local connections are made through the "Network and Sharing Center" (from the "Control Panel"). You need to select "Browser Properties", then go to "Connections" and click on "Network Setting". And there you can set either the script or the parameters for the proxy.
Chromium does not support proxies in-house. There is a corresponding item in the menu, but clicking on it will open the regular proxy server settings in Windows or MacOS.
What else…