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Natalya Kosenko’s Blog

First six months of being a developer First six months of being a developer My dream to work as a developer came true My dream to work as a developer came true Enjoying Android development through pain Enjoying Android development through pain Life of a developer is not what I thought Life of a developer is not what I thought Dockerizing Next.js application Dockerizing Next.js application Little joys of engineering manager Little joys of engineering manager Failed to get freelance programmer job Failed to get freelance programmer job Study Master’s in NTU - continuation of my story Study Master’s in NTU - continuation of my story What it feels like to study Master’s in NTU Singapore What it feels like to study Master’s in NTU Singapore Writing Context Managers in Python
Writing Context Managers in Python
Natalya Kosenko · 2018-10-05 · via Natalya Kosenko’s Blog

Today was a happy day: for the first time in my life I consciously used a python context manager. When I started coding with Python in May this year, I struggled to get the idea of context managers. Then I read a book “Python Tricks” by Dan Bader, which brought me out of darkness. Since then I was waiting for some real-life situation where I can apply my new knowledge. And today it happened!

So today I was writing a web scraper that supposed to get some information from the site X. Before scraping I needed to login: fill in a form and submit it, that is why I decided to use Selenium Webdriver. My first impulse was to write something like this:

driver = webdriver.Chrome()
try:
    driver.get('http://www.natalyakosenko.com/')

    email = driver.find_element_by_name('email')
    password = driver.find_element_by_name('password')

    email.send_keys('my_email')
    password.send_keys('my_password')
    driver.find_element_by_name('submit').click()
finally:
    driver.close()

Basically, this code creates an instance of Chrome webdriver, then tries to do some stuff (in this case fills in email/password and presses Submit button), and finally close method is called to close a browser.

Then I realised that I will need to use Selenium Webdirver in other parts of my code, and I did not want to instantiate driver and write try/catch again and again. And this is where I thought: what a great opportunity to try a with statement in action!

The previous code written using with statement:

class SeleniumDriver:
    def __enter__(self):
        self.driver = webdriver.Chrome()
        return self.driver

    def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
        if self.driver:
            self.driver.close()


with SeleniumDriver() as driver:
    driver.get('http://www.natalyakosenko.com/')

    email = driver.find_element_by_name('email')
    password = driver.find_element_by_name('password')

    email.send_keys('my_email')
    password.send_keys('my_password')
    driver.find_element_by_name('submit').click()

What is the benefit, you might think, instead of 12 lines of code got 19. But I do not need to define SeleniumDriver class every time. Whenever I need to use Selenium Webdriver in other parts of the code, I can simply write this:

with SeleniumDriver() as driver:
    driver.get('http://www.natalyakosenko.com/')

    email = driver.find_element_by_name('email')
    password = driver.find_element_by_name('password')

    email.send_keys('my_email')
    password.send_keys('my_password')
    driver.find_element_by_name('submit').click()

Isn’t it beautiful?