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I'm trying to do simple click on some page element(like a btn or link).

I have wrote 2 functions for clicking via xpath and via CSS selectors.

Both of those functions perfectly works in browser's developer console, but partially does'nt work in CEF.

  • code perfectly click's in simple links from Developer Console and from Cef
  • code perfectly click's on exact button from Developer Console but doesn't do click from CEF. It's just ignore it for some reason...
  • How can this be? Js code is absolutely the same!...

        public void Click(string xpath)
            var js = "document.evaluate(\"" + xpath + "\", document, null, XPathResult.ANY_TYPE, null).iterateNext().click();";
            EvaluateJavascript(js);
        public void ClickCss(string css)
            var js = "document.querySelector('"+ css + "').click()";
            EvaluateJavascript(js);
        public async Task EvaluateJavascript(string script)
            JavascriptResponse javascriptResponse = await Browser.GetMainFrame().EvaluateScriptAsync(script);
            if (!javascriptResponse.Success)
                throw new JavascriptException(javascriptResponse.Message);
    

    details:

    one more time: same js code perfectly works in browser dev console, but doesn't work in CEF for some reason.

    By the way, I have tested JS code in Chrome. So WebEngine is the same in both situations.

    PS: Also will work for me simulation of drag-and-drop of some specific file to some specific web-element. But I didn't found any information about this not for Cef, not for Js, not for JQuery... =(

    @amaitland but the same code works in browser. I didn't get "popup blocked" message in my browser. OpenFileDialog was successfully opened in Chrome and Firefox wit the same code and the same button. – Andrew_STOP_RU_WAR_IN_UA Aug 3, 2018 at 23:40 @amaitland on the simplier example (just a link) work's well in Cef. I have wrote this in my question :) – Andrew_STOP_RU_WAR_IN_UA Aug 3, 2018 at 23:42 CEF also has devtools, you can use them for debugging. If you are trying to open a file dialog then I believe your hitting a security restriction, see what messages appear in devtools. – amaitland Aug 3, 2018 at 23:54
    public void MouseClick(int x, int y)
        Browser.GetBrowser().GetHost().SendMouseClickEvent(x, y, MouseButtonType.Left, false, 1, CefEventFlags.None);
        Thread.Sleep(15);
        Browser.GetBrowser().GetHost().SendMouseClickEvent(x, y, MouseButtonType.Left, true, 1, CefEventFlags.None);
                    Greatly appreciated, served as inspiration for KeyEvent issues I had. When JavaScript cannot, CefSharp saves the day.
    – Janis S.
                    Nov 23, 2018 at 19:39
                    that coordinates coming from the element right? i wonder what is the meaning of true / false of the same function call in that mouse click? Is that pressed in and released ?
    – gumuruh
                    Feb 22, 2021 at 14:08
                    took me 3 days to get to this answer, didn't know about JS restrictions on firing things from code like the file selector
    – Nestor Mancilla
                    Nov 8, 2022 at 20:00
    

    The answer above works ok. I just like to add some information that I think is very important...

    Get DOM Element's position, and simulate a Mouse Click (and Move):

    // get button's position
    string jsonString = null;
    var jsReponse = await chromiumWebBrowser1.EvaluateScriptAsync(
    @"(function () {
        var bnt = document.getElementById('pnnext');
        bnt.focus();
        var bntRect = bnt.getBoundingClientRect();
        return JSON.stringify({ x: bntRect.left, y: bntRect.top });
    })();"
    if (jsReponse.Success && jsReponse.Result != null)
        jsonString = (string)jsReponse.Result;
    // send mouse click event
    if (jsonString != null)
        var jsonObject = JObject.Parse(jsonString);
        var xPosition = (int)jsonObject["x"] + 1;  // add +1 pixel to the click position
        var yPosition = (int)jsonObject["y"] + 1;  // add +1 pixel to the click position
        var host = chromiumWebBrowser1.GetBrowser().GetHost();
        host.SendMouseMoveEvent(xPosition, yPosition, false, CefEventFlags.None);
        Thread.Sleep(50);
        host.SendMouseClickEvent(xPosition, yPosition, MouseButtonType.Left, false, 1, CefEventFlags.None);
        Thread.Sleep(50);
        host.SendMouseClickEvent(xPosition, yPosition, MouseButtonType.Left, true, 1, CefEventFlags.None);
    

    1 - The best way to get a DOM element's position on CefSharp, up to the present moment, is executing a custom JavaScript, and parse the result back. That's the purpose of the first segment of the code above. It gets an element by its ID (as defined on the HTML structure of the loaded web page), then gets its position relative to the viewport, and then returns it back to the C# code. Back on C#, we parse it using Newtonsoft's JObject.Parse method.

    2 - The clicking occurs at the specified x and y coordinates, but is very important to know that this coordinates are relative to the browser component window (viewport). So if your web browser component is only 100px tall and you send a clicking command to y coordinate as 150px the clicking will occur but outside the web browser, hence, not in the web page.

    3 - One trick to see if the click is really being executed, and where exactly, is change it from MouseButtonType.Left to MouseButtonType.Right. Doing it, if there is no restrictions on the web page, you will be able to see the "mouse right button menu". If you are clicking outside, chances are that you'll see a "mouse right button menu" on the OS (Windows here, and I was able to see that I was clicking outside my component with this trick) .

    4 - Sometimes (specially with anti-crawler environments) it's necessary to also mimic the mouse movement. I do it using the method SendMouseMoveEvent as shown in the first line.

    5 - If you have a very tall page loaded in your component, and you need to click on a button really outside the boundaries of the component, you need to scroll the web page. You can do it execution some JavaScript as on the example code above, or You can do it with code below:

    Simulate a Mouse Scroll (Mouse Wheel Event):

    // send scroll command
    // (mouse position X, mouse position Y, how much to scroll X, how much to scroll Y, events)
    chromiumWebBrowser1.GetBrowser().GetHost().SendMouseWheelEvent(10, 10, 0, -100, CefEventFlags.None); 
    Thread.Sleep(300);
    

    The biggest part of the parameters are self-explanatory, but the most important part here is the 3rd and 4th parameters, which are respectively "how much to scroll X" and "how much to scroll Y". To scroll down, just use negative values, and to scroll up, positive ones. In the code above, it scrolls nothing (zero pixels) horizontally (x axis) and 100px down vertically (y axis).

    You can use this code inside a loop to scroll how much you need. I use it in conjunction with a JavaScript code to retrieve the position of a button, to detect if it's on the viewport, or if i need to send a scroll event again.

    Using JSON to represent x,y coordinates seems overkill and has unnessicary overhead. Just return the two values in an array in JavaScript and in .Net you'll get a corresponding array with a simple cast. Mixing await and ContinueWith is a little clunky, using one or another would be better from a code readability point of view. – amaitland Dec 6, 2020 at 3:12 @amaitland thanks for your revision. About "using JSON is an overkill", yeah but it keeps everything tidy, and if for any reason I change the order of parameters in JS or need to return some other values, I don't need to change the rest of the code. I think it's too little processing overhead to have a great way to keep data organized. If I use a simple array, I won't have any way to name the properties, and will rely only on the order of elements in the array, which could be a maintenance nightmare... – Vitox Dec 7, 2020 at 8:24 @amaitland about the "mixing await and ContinueWith" you're totally right. It was bad design, thanks for pointing it up. I rewrite it, and think it's way better now. Let me know what do you think. – Vitox Dec 7, 2020 at 8:52 If you wish to name the properties then return a simple object in JavaScript and you'll get a dictionary in .Net with the key value pairs. Await usage is much easier to read now :+1: – amaitland Dec 7, 2020 at 9:28

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