yes, thats exactly what I want to do.

On Oct 29, 5:07 pm, "Ian Bambury" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> John,
> Your code will get elements in the GWT page, darkflame is trying to get
> elements in the parent page- i.e. the parent page has an iframe in it
> containing the GWT page, and darkflame wants stuff from the parent page...
>
> ...if I understand correctly.
>
> Ian
>
> http://examples.roughian.com
>
> 2008/10/29 John <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>
>
>
>
> > On 10/23/08, darkflame <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > >  If my GWT app is in a container iframe, is it possible to get
> > >  propertys of elements from outside that frame?
>
> > >  I tried a simple;
>
> > >   DOM.getElementById("testid").getInnerText())
>
> > >  But the app couldnt find it.
>
> > >  Is there any way for the GWT app to look "outside" its container? Or
> > >  to even tell if it has one?
>
> > I use EXACTLY the code you use, and it works for me.
>
> > Specifically, I put a div directly above the div which contains the
> > gwt project, thus:
>
> > <div id="testid" style= "visibility: hidden;" >stuff goes here</div>
>
> > I use this so that I can plunk my gwt app on different sites without
> > any modification whatsoever, and pass in the variables it needs for
> > the particular site.
>
> > John
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