On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Bill Stephenson wrote: > On Jun 28, 2005, at 12:40 PM, Chris Devers wrote: > > > No, but it can be done trivially in software. > > > > $ lynx -dump -source http://devers.homeip.net:8080/frametest.html > > <html> > > <head> > > <title>Frametest</title> > > </head> > > <body> > > <frameset cols="100%" rows="100%"> > > <frame src="http://google.com" /> > > </frameset> > > </body> > > </html> > > $ > > There are Javascripts that work "onLoad" to break this when a site > tries it too. I had a competitors site framing some pages I created > years ago and found a script to prevent it. Sure, but it sounded to me like the site being put behind this fixed URL frameset was under his control, so that's less of an issue here.
There are clearly better ways to get the desired result, but I can't think of an easier one, and for the most part, this should do the job. -- Chris Devers -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <http://learn.perl.org/> <http://learn.perl.org/first-response>