Is there a way to use an iframe or some other method of showing a named div from another website?
I want to pull in some data from a government website into a google map and when they click the point I want the information from one of the divs on that page to display.
Using JQuery, you should be able to exactly that with the load-function.
Here is a small example to get a container with id "container" on a page called Test.html:
$('#contentDiv').load('/Test.html #container');
You can visit the JQuery documentation here for more info.
I take assumption that you are sure of div's ID in that other website.
If yes. use Jquery Ajax to pull the site's content into a hidden iframe in your site. then fetch the content of the div-in-question into some variable and then you can use it for your purpose (parse html table data or do whatever)
Discard the iframe's content so that you don't have unnecessary items in your page's DOM.
Ajax Call
In-House Service to Scrape the HTML from the page
Select the div with xpath / SGML parser
Return to ajax call-handler
Replace the content of your div
However There are other problems, i.e. scraping someone's site for their content without their permission is BAD.
They may or may not care, but still you should seek permission, or one day you could find your webserver blacklisted from their site. Or worse... Especially a government site.
You should probably go about figuring out how to properly obtain the data you need (perhaps there's an api somewhere) and then render your own version.
You would have to make use of either JSONP or a middle-agent to retrieve the data (i.e. a PHP script using the CURL library).
JSONP functionality is included in numerous Javascript libraries such as MooTools and jQuery. That is the method I would use.
MooTools: http://mootools.net/docs/more/Request/Request.JSONP
jQuery: http://docs.jquery.com/Release:jQuery_1.2/Ajax
Once you have retrieved the body of the page the DIV resides on, you could use REGEX to extract the information from the specific DIV element.
Related
I want to add twitter card meta tags to my website. i cannot add static tags since the content attribute in the meta tag has to change dynamically.
Plz help if someone has a solution.
You can't, at least not in any way that Twitter is going to recognise.
When Twitter fetches the page, it is always going to get the meta elements that are in the HTML, never ones added with client side JavaScript.
If you are changing content dynamically then make use of the history API to update the URI, and make sure that the server will generate all the content for each URI when the URI is used as an entry point (you can still use JavaScript to generate the content when moving from another page on the site).
You can generate pages dynamically (server side) as long as you don't intend to change them after. Think about the process in the same way you would build landing pages for SEO purposes. Twitterbot is in many ways really similar to Googlebot and similar indexers.
See https://dev.twitter.com/blog/twitter-cards-tips-tricks for a few examples of sites doing this.
I try to create an iframe and replace images and links source with my own sources to remove disturbing contents like pornography, violence etc. Removing is not allowed by iframe. I use sandbox for prevent scripts and flash. Is there a way for this? Or what is the best practice to do that?
You can fetch website content by ajax, then replace all occurrences that you looking for and display data. I am quite not sure whether it will be possible to insert dom directly into iframe or object. I will check that out.
If that fails, you can create intermediate service, for instance in PHP, to grab content by curl and then display script results in iframe on your own server.
I am building a Wordpress plugin to display a list of jobs to a user pulled from a recruiting platform API. On click of a job, a cURL request is sent to the API that pulls the job details as a full HTML page (the online job advertisement). I have everything working fine in terms of pulling the HTML, but I cannot figure out how to display it to the user.
How can I either:
Open a new tab to display the HTML pulled from the AJAX request
or
Open the full HTML within a div on the same page (i.e. a modal)
I would prefer to open the HTML in a new page, but don't know how to use jQuery to do this... Opening within the page in a modal is also fine, but as far as I understand iFrames (which I would rather not use anyway), you have to pass a url (and I simply have the full markup). Is there a way to display this within a page, perhaps using canvas? It carries its own links to CSS and Javascript that need to apply only within that sub-page.
EDIT:
As a clarification, I know that I can simply place the HTML within the page. My issue is that it is a full page. This means it has a <head> <body>, and its own CSS links. Just putting it in the page messes with the rest of the CSS and produces invalid HTML.
This is what I already have:
$.post(ajaxurl, data, function(response) {
$('.sg-jobad-full').html(response);
});
It places the response within the page perfectly well... but it messes up the page by introducing a <body> within a <body> and competing CSS.
If you put the response in a <div>, it will mess the markup because css/js/meta definitions may not be put into the <body>.
If there is a way to retrieve the data without the markup already beeing in, you could parse the data and let it print via a javascript, which is the method I'd prefere.
According to your comment, you should really go with iframes, all other methods will alter your markup to have <html> tags inside <html>, which is very bad practice.
Iframes can be styled just like a <div> element, and it is realy not dirty to use iframes for the purpose you mentioned (it does not load from a foreign host, it is not hidden, it does not track).
<iframe class="job-offers-plugin" src=".../wp-content/plugins/yourplugin/getJobs.php">
</iframe>
Put some style into it like width;height;padding;margin;overflow; place it where you like..
This helps you with the databse:
Using WPDB in standalone script?
Add permalinks to your plugin script:
http://teachingyou.net/wordpress/wordpress-how-to-create-custom-permalinks-to-use-in-your-plugins-the-easy-way/
If you get the full HTML in an jQuery.ajax(...) call, you can always just show it in a certain div on your page.
$.ajax({
success: function (resp){
// resp should be your html code
$("#div").html(resp);
}
});
You can use the $(selector).html(htmlCode) everywhere you want. You can insert it into modals, divs, new pages...
If you have to inject a whole HTML page you can:
strip the tags you don't need
or
use an iframe and write the content to that iframe: How to set HTML content into an iframe
iframes aren't my favourite thing... but it's a possibility
I'm trying to create a web page able to change a site visualization (.css or / and .js) in order to recreate the same live change capability offred by Firebug for Firefox or the Inspector of Chrome.
Here an image to better explain my task:
I have been able to visualize the other site inside my page using the iframe, but unfortunately it is not possible to change its visualization and access its elements due to the "same origin policy".
Is there a way to do this using the iframe or loading the external site inside another element?
Update:
Considering the answers the options should be:
create a php proxy page to load the target site and change visualization on it.
create a browser extention.
I've tried the first, even if it requires to install a web server (xampp), with a simple page calling the function file_get_contents('http://www.site.com');
The page is loaded but unfortunately missed some elements (like images) and it is only a static copy; it is not possible to go further in the site navigation.
Update 2:
Load the entire page via javascript could be the better solution (I don't konw how) if it is possible to live change the code but what about the possibility to interact with this "page copy" and transfer the interaction to the original one?
Scheme:
Explanation:
I've noticed Firebug extention can select and live edit any page element, even if they belong to the iframe which loads an external domain page.
What I'm looking for is a way to act like Firebug, get an element and change its style.
I'm trying to load the site into the iframe beacuse I wanted to create a toolbar above it to select my "visualization styles"; for example a button to makes titles bigger and red.
Anyway I'm open to any other methods suggestions.
Update 3:
I have found an extention for both FireFox and Chrome which is really close to my aim: "Stylish"
This add on allows to live change any site css proprerty and save it in order to reload them every time you'll visit the page.
Now my question is: How can I do the same creating a dedicated page to load and change visualization of a specific site?
FINAL EDIT:
In order to continue this question with a more relevant arguments I decided to ask a new one: create a php proxy page
No. Your solutions may be
to let your own site act as proxy so the same origin policy isn't triggered
to build an extension, which will be browser dependent (Firefox or Chrome) and which will require authorization and installation
I'm not sure if I understand what you want very well, but my feeling to ''trick'' this easier would probably to give very specific height and width to your first site (the iframe) and do a jQuery condition
If ($('body').width() == 500 && $('body').height() == 400 {
$('body').addClass('isiFrame');
}
Then, you only have to do your css .isiFrame .myCoolDivs {....}
You might have to use it on a document ready also, but that could be one way to trick it and since you're not doing it on resize (exepect if somebody's having his screen at this exact width and height at start)
The safer way would probably to create a master session using PHP but I cannot give you an example since it've been to long and echo the body class if the master_session or variable is equal to true
Hope it helped!
If you try to fight Same_origin_policy and try to fight it I am sure you won't get much success their.
Server Side
I would suggest you Handle this on server-side, grab the web-page and apply whatever styling and scripts you want, should be very easy!!
If you use Ruby on rails - Nokogiri gem can help you to parse html. And you can use standard library to 'get' a webpage.
Client Side
If you want to do this on client side, you need to write some jquery/javascript code, you can take following steps:
Get the webpage you want to display.
Grab the element's which include js/css files, remove them and your own.
Display the page in new Iframe present in your page.
Hiho,
There's an existing website that i need to include into another site which goes like this:
a.mysite.com
and i need to fetch content from this site in my
www.mysite.com
website...
As i need to access the content of the iframe the Same origin policy produces a problem here.
What i did was to configure mod_proxy on Apache to proxy pass all requests from
www.mysite.com/a
to
a.mysite.com
This will work fine...but my problem is that im not sure what the best way would be to include those pages.
1. Idea
As the content of the iframe is a full featured site with a top navigation...left navigation etc....i would need to change the page template to only show the content box to be able to integrate that page in the iframe.
2. Idea
I could just load the DIV where the content lies through JQuery.load() and integrate it into my site.
What is the best way to accomplish such a task? How bad is both ideas from the SEO point of view?
Unless it involves significant rework, the best solution is to combine the two into a single HTML page on the server side (using server-side includes).
Advantages:
No problems with SEO as it's delivered as a single page. Content in iFrames and content loaded via AJAX (with an associated link in the HTML) are traversed, but only the link, not the content itself is associated with the main page. See: http://www.straightupsearch.com/search-marketing/best-practices/seo_iframes_a_g/
Faster page load - either of your suggestions will cause the main page to be loaded first before the other content is loaded.
No reliance on Javascript - your second method will fail completely if javascript is not supported / turned on.
Include all JS and CSS only once - your first method will require these to be duplicated in the <head> of each page. This is more of a long term advantage if you wish to achieve full integration of site "a". However, it can be a disadvantage initially, see below.
Disadvantage:
May cause conflicts with scripts and CSS between the two pages. However, this same problem exists with your second method.
If you must choose between either of the two options you proposed, I would not select the second as others have suggested. Significant amounts of static content should never be loaded via Ajax, and in this scenario gives you no additional benefits. At least iFrames guarantee no JS and CSS conflicts.
Use the 2nd approach (jQuery.load) and if you're working with HTML5, for browsers that support the History API you can change the URL to whatever the content is for that div.
Check out https://github.com/blog/760-the-tree-slider for an example of how github did it for their tree slider.
EDIT:
I am not sure how using an iFrame whose src points to your own domain affects search rankings but at best it's a grey area. I would assume that possibly some pagerank would trickle from the parent to the child but I have no clue how it would work for instance if a blogger linked to your page with the iframe that pointed to another page. This would be a pretty good question to ask at the Webmaster Help Forum
Always say no to iframes. jQuery+Ajax all the way.