On Apr 8, 2:04 pm, "Diez B. Roggisch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > LaundroMat wrote: > > Hi - > > > I'm working on a Django powered site where one of the required > > functionalities is the possibility of displaying the content of > > external pages, with an extra banner at the top where specific > > information is displayed. In other words, I'm looking for a way to > > reproduce an existing web page and add some HTML code to it. (I can't > > think of an example right now, but the idea is similar to sites that > > let you see an external page and have some site-specific text above it > > (often stating that the content below is not part of the site the user > > comes from)). > > > To test this, I've been downloading an external page, adding some text > > to it and re-opening it in a browser (with the help of built-in > > modules such as urllib2 etc). This works of course, but the external > > page's links such as <img src="hello.png">, or <a href="help.html"> > > are evidently no longer correct. > > > Apart from parsing the whole file and trying to inject the external > > site's domain in links such as the above (with the added inconvenience > > of having to store the external page locally), is there an easier way > > of accomplishing what I want? > > Using a frame? > > Diez
Ack. I was too focused on importing the external web page and redisplaying the information (I've just been reading up on BeautifulSoup) instead of looking for an HTML based approach. Thanks! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list