I am trying to trap events from internet explorer eg. when user clicks
on an html link - I need to get notified for that event.
After looking through the newgroups / internet and reading through
various sections in programming python on win32 - I understand that
this can be done using DispatchWith
Hi
Thanks for the response and for the code.
However, I want to trap events like mouse click on the HTML document
loaded by the web browser control. The code mentioned below provides
events from the web browser control. I need to find out on which
particular HTML tag did the user click for example.
Thanks for your prompt responses and the code.
However, when I run the code I get com error
d=win32com.client.DispatchWithEvents(ie.Document, Doc_Events)
File "C:\Python23\lib\site-packages\win32com\client\__init__.py",
line 199, in __getattr__
return getattr(self._obj_, attr)
File "C:\Pyt
Thanks for the response again. The solution is pretty close but not yet
complete
This is what I observed.
a) I tried to use the delay mechanism as suggested below
ie.
ie.Navigate('www.google.com')
while ie.ReadyState !- 4
time.sleep(0.5)
d=win32com.client.DispatchWithEvents(ie.Document, Doc
> This might make a good candidate for the Cookbook (or there's
> a collection of IE automation examples at win32com.de)
> so anybody else trying to do something similar knows some of the
pitfalls.
This thread has been very valuable for me and has provided
clarifications which I could not get afte
Resurrecting an old thread..
It seems that this solution does not return events on objects within
frames in webpages eg . if you go to www.andersondirect.com - the page
is composed of three frames called as topFrame main and address. Now
when I click on say 'Select a Vehicle' which is within main -
Resurrecting a month old thread.. (listed at
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/comp.lang.python/browse_thread/thread/2f4e50e1e316eef4/5924203f822f7f4b?q=cal_2pac&rnum=3#5924203f822f7f4b)
Somehow - responses to that thread are not being brought up in
chronological order. Thus the creatio