Documentation for automated readers
A curated documentation index is available at: https://grafana.com/llms.txt
A complete documentation index is available at: https://grafana.com/llms-full.txt
These indexes can help with page discovery before fetching individual documents.
This page is also available in Markdown, which may be easier for automated readers and AI tools to parse than HTML. The Markdown version is available at https://grafana.com/docs/k6/latest/javascript-api/k6-browser/locator/presssequentially.md, or by sending Accept: text/markdown to https://grafana.com/docs/k6/latest/javascript-api/k6-browser/locator/presssequentially/. For broader documentation discovery, the curated index is available at https://grafana.com/llms.txt and the complete index is available at https://grafana.com/llms-full.txt.
pressSequentially(text, [options])
Focuses the element and then sends a keydown, keypress/input, and keyup event for each character in the text.
This method is useful for simulating real user typing behavior when the page has special keyboard event handling, such as input validation, autocomplete, or character counters that trigger on individual key presses. For simple text input without special keyboard handling, use fill() instead, as it’s faster and more reliable.
| Parameter | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| text | string | '' | Text to type into the focused element character by character. |
| options | object | null | |
| options.delay | number | 0 | Milliseconds to wait between key presses. Defaults to 0. |
| options.noWaitAfter | boolean | false | If set to true and a navigation occurs from performing this action, it will not wait for it to complete. |
| options.timeout | number | 30000 | Maximum time in milliseconds. Pass 0 to disable the timeout. Default is overridden by the setDefaultTimeout option on
BrowserContext or
Page. |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
Promise<void> | A Promise that fulfills when the text has been typed into the element. |
Examples
Basic usage
import { browser } from 'k6/browser';
export const options = {
scenarios: {
browser: {
executor: 'shared-iterations',
options: {
browser: {
type: 'chromium',
},
},
},
},
};
export default async function () {
const page = await browser.newPage();
try {
await page.goto('https://test.k6.io/browser.php');
// Type text character by character
const textInput = page.locator('#text1');
await textInput.pressSequentially('Hello World');
} finally {
await page.close();
}
}Typing with delay
This example demonstrates typing text with a delay between keystrokes to simulate realistic user typing speed:
import { browser } from 'k6/browser';
export const options = {
scenarios: {
browser: {
executor: 'shared-iterations',
options: {
browser: {
type: 'chromium',
},
},
},
},
};
export default async function () {
const page = await browser.newPage();
try {
await page.goto('https://test.k6.io/browser.php');
// Type text with 100ms delay between each character
const searchInput = page.locator('input[type="text"]');
await searchInput.pressSequentially('test query', { delay: 100 });
} finally {
await page.close();
}
}Best practices
- Use
fill()for simple text input: For form fields without special keyboard handling, use fill() instead as it’s significantly faster and more reliable. - Use
pressSequentially()for interactive input: Only usepressSequentially()when testing features that require gradual typing, such as:- Autocomplete suggestions
- Input validation that triggers per character
- Character counters
- Search-as-you-type functionality
- Consider performance: Typing character-by-character is slower than filling text directly. Use this method only when necessary for accurate testing.
- Handling special keys: For special keys like
Enter,Tab, orEscape, use press() instead.
Related
Was this page helpful?
Related resources from Grafana Labs

