Understanding WebViews: What is WebView And How To Test It?

Harshit Paul

Posted On: August 14, 2018

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Read time6 Min Read

Convenience is something that we can never be fully satisfied with. This is why software developers are always made to push their limits for bringing a better user experience, without compromising the functionality. All for the sake of saving the churn in today’s competitive business. People are greedy for convenience and this is why Hybrid applications have been so congenial in the cyber world.

What is so unique about Hybrid application? Yeah, that’s right. WebViews!

Mobile App Technology Stacks

Hybrid Applications – As the name suggests they are a mixture of Native and Web Applications. They are available in application store for download and require set of access from device like native apps, but they also have a browser embedded in the application(WebView) for rendering HTML.
Instagram is a good example of a hybrid application.

Remember the time, when we wished to access any third party link; it used to open in a new browser on the device. Resulting in, moving us out from the application where we were intended to work on. A disaster to User Experience which was resolved by facilitating an in-app browser window for facilitating third-party web pages as part of activity layout. Kudos to WebViews!

Why do you need WebViews?

  • It provides a better control over your application’s UI.
  • You don’t have to make an update on the entire application, if you wish to bring an update over your app content. Say, you wish to publicise about an upcoming sale on your application or some other exciting offer.
  • You don’t get pushed onto another 3rd party application, rather an in-app browser pulls the content from the web for you. With the convenience of staying in the intended application. Take Instagram for an instance, where you need to swipe up in some stories and you are redirected to a webpage through a in-app browser, rather than opening the content in chrome, safari, firefox or any other browser. You can navigate the content freely on the redirected webpage by scrolling up/down, zooming in/out or searching for a text.
  • Webviews allow cross-platform development resulting in reduced development cost, along with flexibility to a developer.
    Note: We cannot make a single build of an application to work on multiple OS though.
    We can only ease the development of another build with the help of web extension through HTML, CSS, Javascript etc
  • Companies often aim to build a wrapper application of an existing webapp. By doing so companies aim for creating a presence in the application stores with comparatively less endeavour. Also, frameworks like Ionic allows you to transit an application on the app store, and deploy to the mobile web as a PWA

For generating a WebView, a developer you need to:

  • Develop an instance of a webview class
  • Embed a browser in your application
  • Add browser functionalities with the help of WebView Library
  • Add internet permission in the Android Manifest file
  • Add the code for WebView to open in-app browser.

WebView Testing- Refers to creating and executing test cases for checking the effective working mechanism of WebViews.

Keep a note of the following while testing Webviews:

  • Verify if the application is responding according to its intended behavior by interrupting the webpage from loading.
  • If your content is including hyperlinked email addresses in the Webview then make those hyperlinks are opening mail application in your device when tapped.
  • Test similarly for a hyperlinked phone number, whether it is routing user to dialer app or not? Also, how is that hyperlink responding if a SIM is not inserted in the device.
  • Test the response of WebView in different network modes – 2G, 3G, WiFi, LTE .
  • Special characters should be also be tested. Along with zooming in/out , navigating the web content by scrolling up/down or navigating the screen left/right.
  • Test the tolerance of WebView against external factors like SMS, signal drop, notifications, call etc.
  • Test the behaviour of your application when an external application is launched by a hyperlink from your web content.
  • Vary orientation of your device and test your web content is able to support them.
  • Test if the graphic display is satisfactory.
  • Compress the browser window and see if the text is being compressed appropriately.
  • A cross browser platform will be very helpful in testing the above mentioned tips to test. It will also provide an idea as to how your WebView is being portrayed to the targeted audience.
    Learn how to perform cross browser testing with LambdaTest?


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How to perform WebView Testing?

Espresso-Web for Android WebView – This tool helps in examining and controlling the behaviour of a WebView UI components by reusing Atoms from the WebDriver API. It is one of the most common tool used for testing hybrid applications.
It is required to check the Integration of an application’s native UI components and its WebView UI components.

Before using Espresso-web, you need to thoroughly analyse source code of your website for determining hooks for its methods. This is why it could become very complex for compound websites.

Alternative approach

A different approach would involve forgetting the third party code and focusing only on the Android. Basically, a WebView maps elements of website; allowing user to interact with them through Android View objects and their extensions. These views don’t have an ID making them inaccessible with findViewById(int id). You can neither access these IDs in your application package.

That doesn’t mean that you can’t track them. You can with the help of Android Device Monitor – A standalone tool for providing a UI to aid multiple Android application analysis and debugging tools.

  • You need to take snapshot of every screen on emulator with Android Device Monitor.
  • Acknowledge how the WebViews are internally structured.
  • Perform actions on them with the help of UiAutomator.

This approach won’t require you to analyze the source code. Acknowledge the screens and adjust accordingly. This way requires less effort in establishing and maintaining. Well, now you know an alternative to Espresso-web.

So now if somebody starts a conversation on WebViews and throws the ball is in your court – I hope you will be able to smash it. Cheers!

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Harshit Paul

Harshit works as a product growth specialist at LambdaTest. He is also an experienced IT professional, who loves to share his thoughts about the latest tech trends as an enthusiast tech blogger.

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