Skip to content
Hélio Guilherme edited this page Apr 9, 2020 · 35 revisions

Frequently Asked Questions

A place to have questions and solutions.

1. Q: On MacOS double and single quotes are replaced by invalid characters, how to fix?

A: You have to disable auto-correction in MacOS System Preferences. See Issue #1949

2. Q: In the newest versions of RIDE (1.7.4) and with Robot Framework 3.1.2, when I edit a Test Suite having : FOR, then, when is executed, appears the following error: FOR loop contains no keywords.. How to fix this?

A: Robot Framework is tolerant to the old : FOR format, and the test suite can be executed correctly. However, when the file is edited in RIDE, it looses the old style formatting, so you must add the terminating END.

In the next images you can see how is shown the old and new styles (the Code Editor is showing the file not formatted):

Old FOR in Text Editor Old FOR in Grid Editor

Then it must be changed to: New FOR in Text Editor New FOR in Grid Editor

3. Q: I installed RIDE, on Python 3.7 but it does not start, see below the error. How to start RIDE?

C:\>ride
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Program Files\Python37\Scripts\ride.py", line 21, in <module>
    from robotide import main
ImportError: No module named robotide

A: A possible way to start RIDE is:

python -m robotide.__init__

You can then go to Tools>Create RIDE Desktop Shortcut, or run the shortcut creation script with:

python -m robotide.postinstall -install

4. Q: How can I preserve the Log.html and Report.html from different test runs, preferably with a timestamp?

A: You should use the robot option for the output directory (-d) in the arguments text field. See Issue #1891

See below an example for Windows, using date formatting in the current test directory:

-d ./%date:~-4,4%%date:~-10,2%%date:~-7,2%

The similar result in Linux or MacOS can be obtained with the date command:

-d `date +%F_%X`

5. Q: On Windows, when running test suites with Asian characters on filenames or paths, the Output and Log panels show those characters with ??. How to fix?

A: The problem happens because Windows does not use UTF-8 encoding (there are many different encodings), we don't have an easy solution to fix. You can create a command file, for example, C:\Python37\Scripts\ride.cmd with the following content:

@echo off
set PYTHONIOENCODING=UTF-8
C:\Python37\python.exe -m robotide.__init__  %*

6. Q: I installed RIDE, on Python 3.8 but there are a lot of problems. Can this be fixed?

A: RIDE (currently version 1.7.4.1), is not compatible with Python 3.8. See the Issues with the tag Python 3.8.

A: Next version of RIDE, 2.0b1 or current development from master will support Python 3.8.

7. Q: How do I install ride on CentOS 7?

A: Robot installation instructions

Python

RIDE runs only on the regular Python, not on Jython nor IronPython. Python 2.7 is the  minimum version. but RIDE 1.7.4 is the last version supporting Python 2.7. Please consider  upgrading to Python 3.6 or 3.7. Python 3.8 WILL ONLY BE SUPPORTED ON FUTURE RIDE 2.0. Most other operating systems than Windows have a recent enough Python installed by default.  CentOS 7 that comes from OpenStack already has Python 2.7.5 installed.  To verify,  open a terminal and type the following: python --version

To upgrade Python to 3.6:

Enable Software Collections (SCL) Software Collections, also known as SCL is a community project that allows you to  build, install, and use multiple versions of software on the same system, without  affecting system default packages. By enabling SCL you will gain access to the  newer versions of programming languages and services which are not available in  the core repositories. CentOS 7 ships with Python 2.7.5 which is a critical part of the CentOS base  system. SCL allows you to install newer versions of python 3.x alongside the  default python v2.7.5 so that system tools such as yum will continue to work  properly. To enable SCL, you need to install the CentOS SCL release file. It is part of the  CentOS extras repository and can be installed by running the following command:

sudo yum install centos-release-scl

Installing Python 3 on CentOS 7

Now that you have access to the SCL repository, you can install any Python 3.x  version you need.

In this tutorial, we will install Python 3.6, which is the most stable version  available and because there is a wxPython package for that version for  RobotFramework/RIDE use at the time of writing. To do so type the  following command on your CentOS 7 terminal: sudo yum install rh-python36 yum install python3-libs

Using Python 3

Once the package rh-python36 is installed, check the Python version by typing:

python --version Python 2.7.5

You will notice that Python 2.7 is the default Python version in your current shell. To access Python 3.6 you need to launch a new shell instance using the Software  Collection scl tool:

alias python=python3 scl enable rh-python36 bash

What the command above does is calling the script /opt/rh/rh-python36/enable, which  changes the shell environment variables. If you check the Python version again, you’ll notice that Python 3.6 is the default  version in your current shell now. python --version Python 3.6.9

It is important to point out that Python 3.6 is set as the default Python version  only in this shell session. If you exit the session or open a new session from  another terminal Python 2.7 will be the default Python version. A simple safe way making this version permanent would be to use an alias. Place this into ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_aliases file:

alias python=python3

wxPython

RIDE's GUI is implemented using wxPython toolkit. RIDE and wxPython requires a graphical system like Gnome, KDE, X11. When installing wxPython, there are a series of requirements that should be  installed automatically, but in some cases is better to install them before. For  example, numpy under Python 2.7, requires version 1.16.1, and it can be installed  before installing RIDE: yum groupinstall "GNOME Desktop" -y yum install SDL pip install numpy==1.16.1

On Linux is better to install wxPython before installing RIDE. This is because the  correct package should be downloaded or installed directly from wxPython. Otherwise,  the system will try to build the installation package and this takes time and not  always succeeds. At the time of this writing, you should use: python3 -m pip install https://extras.wxpython.org/wxPython4/extras/linux/gtk2/centos-7/wxPython-4.0.7.post2-cp36-cp36m-linux_x86_64.whl

To find the latest CentOS 7 whl's  look to  https://extras.wxpython.org/wxPython4/extras/linux/gtk3/centos-7/

Robot Framework 

Installation

pip install robotframework-ride==1.7.4.1 pip install robotframework-seleniumlibrary

NOTE: If any of the above commands fail with "pip: command not found", then change the command from pip to pip3 and the command should work.

To ensure that all of the above installed correctly, use python3 -m pip list and ensure that bumpy, robotframework-ride, wxPython, robotframework and robot framework-seleniumlibrary are all listed.

Invoke Ride

python3 -m robotide.__init__

Robot Help Files

https://robotframework.org https://robotframework.org/robotframework/latest/libraries/BuiltIn.html https://robotframework.org/SeleniumLibrary/SeleniumLibrary.html https://robotframework.org/robotframework/latest/libraries/Collections.html

Clone this wiki locally