public void InitIE(Gtk.Box w) { HoldingWidget = w; Browser = new System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser(); w.SetSizeRequest(500, 500); Browser.Height = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Height; Browser.Width = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Width; Browser.Navigate("about:blank"); Browser.Document.Write(String.Empty); WebSocket = new Gtk.Socket(); WebSocket.SetSizeRequest(Browser.Width, Browser.Height); w.Add(WebSocket); WebSocket.Realize(); WebSocket.Show(); WebSocket.UnmapEvent += Socket_UnmapEvent; IntPtr browser_handle = Browser.Handle; IntPtr window_handle = (IntPtr)WebSocket.Id; NativeMethods.SetParent(browser_handle, window_handle); /// Another interesting issue is that on Windows, the WebBrowser control by default is /// effectively an IE7 browser, and I don't think you can easily change that without /// changing registry settings. The lack of JSON parsing in IE7 triggers errors in google maps. /// See https://code.google.com/p/gmaps-api-issues/issues/detail?id=9004 for the details. /// Including the meta tag of <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge"/> /// fixes the problem, but we can't do that in the HTML that we set as InnerHtml in the /// LoadHTML function, as the meta tag triggers a restart of the browser, so it /// just reloads "about:blank", without the new innerHTML, and we get a blank browser. /// Hence we set the browser type here. /// Another way to get around this problem is to add JSON.Parse support available from /// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON /// into the HTML Script added when loading Google Maps /// I am taking the belts-and-braces approach of doing both, primarily because the /// meta tag, while probably the technically better" solution, sometimes doesn't work. /// 10/8/17 - I've added yet another "fix" for this problem: the installer now writes a /// registry key requesting that IE 11 be used for ApsimNG.exe (and for ApsimNG.vshost.exe, /// so it also works when run from Visual Studio). Browser.DocumentText = @"<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv=""X-UA-Compatible"" content=""IE=edge,10""/> </head> </html>"; }
public void InitIE(Gtk.Box w) { wb = new System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser(); w.SetSizeRequest(500, 500); wb.Height = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Height; wb.Width = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Width; socket.SetSizeRequest(wb.Width, wb.Height); w.Add(socket); socket.Realize(); socket.Show(); IntPtr browser_handle = wb.Handle; IntPtr window_handle = (IntPtr)socket.Id; SetParent(browser_handle, window_handle); }
/* Private members */ private void InitializeSocket () { socket = new Socket(); socket.ModifyBg(StateType.Normal, socket.Style.Black); frame.Child = socket; socket.Realize(); socket.Show(); }
public void InitIE(Gtk.Box w) { wb = new System.Windows.Forms.WebBrowser(); w.SetSizeRequest(500, 500); wb.Height = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Height; wb.Width = 500; // w.GdkWindow.FrameExtents.Width; wb.Navigate("about:blank"); wb.Document.Write(String.Empty); socket = new Gtk.Socket(); socket.SetSizeRequest(wb.Width, wb.Height); w.Add(socket); socket.Realize(); socket.Show(); socket.UnmapEvent += Socket_UnmapEvent; IntPtr browser_handle = wb.Handle; IntPtr window_handle = (IntPtr)socket.Id; SetParent(browser_handle, window_handle); /// Another interesting issue is that on Windows, the WebBrowser control by default is /// effectively an IE7 browser, and I don't think you can easily change that without /// changing registry settings. The lack of JSON parsing in IE7 triggers errors in google maps. /// See https://code.google.com/p/gmaps-api-issues/issues/detail?id=9004 for the details. /// Including the meta tag of <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge"/> /// fixes the problem, but we can't do that in the HTML that we set as InnerHtml in the /// LoadHTML function, as the meta tag triggers a restart of the browser, so it /// just reloads "about:blank", without the new innerHTML, and we get a blank browser. /// Hence we set the browser type here. /// Another way to get around this problem is to add JSON.Parse support available from /// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON /// into the HTML Script added when loading Google Maps /// I am taking the belts-and-braces approach of doing both, primarily because the /// meta tag, while probably the technically better" solution, sometimes doesn't work. wb.DocumentText = @"<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv=""X-UA-Compatible"" content=""IE=edge,10""/> </head> </html>"; }