I actually am highly interested in jumping on the Playwright bandwagon; been hearing about it for a while and am looking to get into it soon. I just want to take the humble route of learning the more common tool first since it is still widely recognized as one of the basic requirement for test automation positions. Plus I want to comprehend the challenges at the beginning of the journey to eventually have an easier time working with the simpler tools later on.
Thank you for responding. I tried creating a symlink, but, unfortunately, still face the same error.
Firefox browser is the default browser that came with the ubuntu os. Been updating the version using snap though. A lot of the beginner material is suggesting to use chromedriver, I will eventually learn through that route, I’m just a bit stubborn when it comes to using the “not-so private” browser. Thanks for your response.
I did assumed it might have had something to do with the memory, as it commonly would. Though I have no issue running multiple OS(s) through VM on virtualbox - my gripe there is the performance/delay; however, because I heard it was possible to run Boxes and virtualbox simultaneously I assumed there was a workaround. Thank you for your response.
I don’t want to discourage anyone from trying it, but from the looks of it, there aren’t much resources for help if you get stuck. Compared to C, which is another low-level language, there is a community and (free) courses (like Harvard’s CS50) to help out with it being the first programming language to start your journey.
Side note, I also believe there’s some taking advantage of from the use of the term ‘odin’ since it might sound familiar to “The Odin Project”; which is a free self-paced programming program structured to help complete beginners learn the basics towards landing your first webdev position.
Thanks for the response.
I am leaning towards Java mainly because I want to have a “humble” approach to coding and then programming, where the challenges of a verbose practice or structure at the start gives a bit of leeway to comprehending future languages, in this case the simplicity of Python; which I very much hope to learn in the not so distance future.
As a manual QA, is writing unit tests a good way to build on coding skills?
Is there more to the process? I downloaded firefox from both the webpage and through CLI and have them both moved to the ~/.local/bin directory(PATH) but still the error message appears to fail the test