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598

answers:

2

Hi all, I'm working on a web application and using the jQuery plug-in Colorbox to pop up a window that presents a form for editing elements of the parent window. I'm using Firebug to debug my Javascript and jQuery, and I noticed that I can't select an element in my Colorbox HTML form using the jQuery console command line. For instance:

$date = $("#date");

returns nothing when run from the jQuery console command line, even though I have an input element with id="date" and the Firebug "element inspect" pointer can find the element in the iFrame. Is there a way to get Firebug's console to access the elements in an iFrame?

Thanks for your help! Doug

+3  A: 

You need to pass iframe's document as a context for your selector, because iframe has its own separated DOM tree:

$('#date', $('iframe').get(0).contentDocument);

In order to get access in iframe's content, it must be loaded from same domain as parent document.

jholster
Yaggo,Thanks for your reply, can you elaborate a little more? I'm not "getting" what you mean by accessing the iFrame's context.Thanks,Doug
writes_on
+5  A: 

You're looking for the cd method, documented here: http://getfirebug.com/wiki/index.php/Command_Line_API

Here's a bookmarklet I use to automate jumping into the iframe for any iframed Facebook application. It should provide enough of an example to modify for your use.

javascript:with(_FirebugCommandLine){cd($$(".canvas_iframe_util")[0].contentWindow)}

Note that with is generally bad practice, but this is literally how Firebug executes what you type into the console, so I mimicked that.

After you've run this, everything you type into the command line executes in the context of the iframe.

bcherry
This is genius. Thank you for sharing that snippet. It makes Facebook iframe app development much easier.
JohnnyO
To clarify, if you're in the Firebug console all you need is the cd(iframedom.contentWindow)
James Baker
Yes, although a bookmarklet is a super handy tool for this.
bcherry