Outside of my domain, I can understand. I'll have to hold off for a
bit then.
Although the page will be remote, it will be accessible by
http://search.mydomain.com. Once it's accessible as a sub domain',
will I then have access to the page's elements?
On Nov 16, 7:55 am, Liam Byrne
No. Cross domain also applies to different sub-domains, protocols, and
ports.
On Nov 20, 11:17 am, webspee...@gmail.com webspee...@gmail.com
wrote:
Outside of my domain, I can understand. I'll have to hold off for a
bit then.
Although the page will be remote, it will be accessible
You can't do this if the content of the iFrame is from a different
server / domain.
e.g. if it's not your content, then you can't get at it this way in
order to show it in your page; you can only display the iframe as the
owner intended.
L
webspee...@gmail.com wrote:
When I try it, I get
I am in a similar situation and I don't want to use the iFrame, but
how do you use jQuery to do the following.
I have a page on my server and I want to display, say, www.google.com
in a portion of my page. With an iFrame, I simply set the src of the
iFrame. I've tried using jQuery to do the same
When I try it, I get this error:
Error: Permission denied for http://www.myurl.com to get property
HTMLDocument.nodeType from http://remoteurl:.
Source File: http://www.myurl.com/js/jquery/jquery.js
Line: 2216
Here is the line of JS being used.
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