I just got to know about gecko and used it in my application. I am not able to use previous functions like
element.count;
element.Innerhtml;
document.Readystate;
and many other functions.
Are there any alternative functions for gecko browser?
I searched for count method and i found
geckoelemnt.Count<>;
but that is not wat i wnat as it needs an argument. Any useful links would be helpful.
Thanks in advance.
First you must initialize the browser, then listen to some events. The most important is DocumentComplete (documentReady). There is where it enables you to navigate DOMtree
if(!Xpcom.IsInitialized) Xpcom.Initialize("Firefox");
_GeckoWebBrowser _brs = new GeckoWebBrowser() { Dock = DockStyle.Fill };
_brs.Navigate("mypage.html");
_brs.AddMessageEventListener("myFunction", recived);
_brs.DomClick += _brs_DomClick;
_brs.DocumentCompleted += _brs_DocumentCompleted;
capture events:
void _brs_DocumentCompleted(object sender, Gecko.Events.GeckoDocumentCompletedEventArgs e)
{
var ele = _brs.Document.GetElementsByClassName("myCssClass");
//All found elements
foreach (GeckoHtmlElement elem in ele)
{
elem.InnerHtml = "My value";
elem.InsertAdjacentHTML("beforeend",MyDomString);
//and many other functions
}
}
void _brs_DomClick(object sender, DomMouseEventArgs e)
{
//Capture dom click.
}
void recived(string s)
{
//myfunction from javascript
}
Related
I use Fiddlercore to capture multiple url's at the same time inside a loop.
Example:
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
// I have 2 url
string arr = new string[]{ url1, url2 };
foreach(var url in arr)
{
new Webbrowser().Navigate(url);
}
Fiddler.FiddlerApplication.AfterSessionComplete
+= new Fiddler.SessionStateHandler(FiddlerApplication_AfterSessionComplete);
}
// I will catch 2 oSession contain same string "a/b/c" in 2 URL from 2 Webbrowser in loop
int Count = 0;
void FiddlerApplication_AfterSessionComplete(Fiddler.Session oSession)
{
if(oSession.fullUrl.contain("a/b/c"))
{
Count+= 1;
richtextbox1.AppendText("oSession.fullUrl" + "\n");
}
if(Count == 2)
{
Count = 0;
StopFiddler();
}
}
void StopFiddler()
{
Fiddler.FiddlerApplication.AfterSessionComplete
-= new Fiddler.SessionStateHandler(FiddlerApplication_AfterSessionComplete);
}
This works but I have a problem. Fiddlercore stops the capture session, but the web browser doesn't stop, it's still loading.
How to stop the WebBrowser from loading after I get what I need.
Use WebBrowser.Stop() to stop all loading.
Cancels any pending navigation and stops any dynamic page elements, such as background sounds and animations.
Edit: Also, you need to save a reference to those WebBrowser controls you're creating, so that you can actually call the Stop method for them. The way you use them now is quite strange and might lead to problems down the line (actually it led to problems already).
I asked this question a while ago but seems that there are no answers, so i tried to go with an alternative solution but i am stuck now, please see the following code:
WebBrowser objWebBrowser = new WebBrowser();
objWebBrowser.DocumentCompleted += new WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventHandler(objWebBrowser_DocumentCompleted);
objWebBrowser.Navigate("http://www.website.com/login.php?user=xxx&pass=xxx");
objWebBrowser.Navigate("http://www.website.com/page.php?link=url");
And here is the event code:
WebBrowser objWebBrowser = (WebBrowser)sender;
String data = new StreamReader(objWebBrowser.DocumentStream).ReadToEnd();
Since it's impossible for me to use the WebBrowser.Document.Cookies before a document is loaded, i have first to navigate the login page, that will store a cookie automatically, but after that i want to call the other navigate in order to get a result. Now using the above code it doesn't work cause it always takes the second one, and it won't work for me to put it in the event cause what i want is like this:
Navigate with the login page and store cookie for one time only.
Pass a different url each time i want to get some results.
Can anybody give a solution ?
Edit:
Maybe the sample of code i provided was misleading, what i want is:
foreach(url in urls)
{
Webborwser1.Navigate(url);
//Then wait for the above to complete and get the result from the event, then continue
}
I think you want to simulate a blocking call to Navigate if you are not authorized. There are probably many ways to accomplish this and other approaches to get what you want, but here's some code I wrote up quickly that might help you get started.
If you have any questions about what I'm trying to do here, let me know. I admit it feels like "a hack" which makes me think there's a smarter solution, but anyway....
bool authorized = false;
bool navigated;
WebBrowser objWebBrowser = new WebBrowser();
void GetResults(string url)
{
if(!authorized)
{
NavigateAndBlockWithSpinLock("http://www.website.com/login.php?user=xxx&pass=xxx");
authorized = true;
}
objWebBrowser.Navigate(url);
}
void NavigateAndBlockWithSpinLock(string url)
{
navigated = false;
objWebBrowser.DocumentCompleted += NavigateDone;
objWebBrowser.Navigate(url);
int count = 0;
while(!navigated && count++ < 10)
Thread.Sleep(1000);
objWebBrowser.DocumentCompleted -= NavigateDone;
if(!navigated)
throw new Exception("fail");
}
void NavigateDone(object sender, WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs e)
{
navigated = true;
}
void objWebBrowser_DocumentCompleted(object sender, WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs e)
{
if(authorized)
{
WebBrowser objWebBrowser = (WebBrowser)sender;
String data = new StreamReader(objWebBrowser.DocumentStream).ReadToEnd();
}
}
I have a web browser automation project written in WinForms C#.
During the navigation there is a point where the browser does the "are you sure you want to leave this page?" popup.
We need this popup, so I cannot remove it from the website code, which means I have to override it in my automation app.
Does anyone have an idea how to do this?
and here was the smooth solution..
add a reference to mshtml and add using mshtml;
Browser.Navigated +=
new WebBrowserNavigatedEventHandler(
(object sender, WebBrowserNavigatedEventArgs args) => {
Action<HtmlDocument> blockAlerts = (HtmlDocument d) => {
HtmlElement h = d.GetElementsByTagName("head")[0];
HtmlElement s = d.CreateElement("script");
IHTMLScriptElement e = (IHTMLScriptElement)s.DomElement;
e.text = "window.alert=function(){};";
h.AppendChild(s);
};
WebBrowser b = sender as WebBrowser;
blockAlerts(b.Document);
for (int i = 0; i < b.Document.Window.Frames.Count; i++)
try { blockAlerts(b.Document.Window.Frames[i].Document); }
catch (Exception) { };
}
);
Are you able to make any changes to the website code?
If so, you might look at exposing an object through ObjectForScripting, then having the website code check window.external (and possibly interrogating your object) before it decides to display the popup - so if it can't find your object, it assumes it's being used normally and shows it.
Don't need add anymore. Try it. Work like a charm. ^_^
private void webNavigated(object sender, WebBrowserNavigatedEventArgs e)
{
HtmlDocument doc = webBrowser.Document;
HtmlElement head = doc.GetElementsByTagName("head")[0];
HtmlElement s = doc.CreateElement("script");
s.SetAttribute("text", "function cancelOut() { window.onbeforeunload = null; window.alert = function () { }; window.confirm=function () { }}");
head.AppendChild(s);
webBrowser.Document.InvokeScript("cancelOut");
}
I have a C# form with a web browser control on it.
I am trying to visit different websites in a loop.
However, I can not control URL address to load into my form web browser element.
This is the function I am using for navigating through URL addresses:
public String WebNavigateBrowser(String urlString, WebBrowser wb)
{
string data = "";
wb.Navigate(urlString);
while (wb.ReadyState != WebBrowserReadyState.Complete)
{
Application.DoEvents();
}
data = wb.DocumentText;
return data;
}
How can I make my loop wait until it fully loads?
My loop is something like this:
foreach (string urlAddresses in urls)
{
WebNavigateBrowser(urlAddresses, webBrowser1);
// I need to add a code to make webbrowser in Form to wait till it loads
}
Add This to your code:
webBrowser1.DocumentCompleted += new WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventHandler(webBrowser1_DocumentCompleted);
Fill in this function
private void webBrowser1_DocumentCompleted(object sender, WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs e) {
//This line is so you only do the event once
if (e.Url != webBrowser1.Url)
return;
//do you actual code
}
After some time of anger of the crappy IE functionality I've came across making something which is the most accurate way to judge page loaded complete.
Never use the WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventHandler event
use WebBrowserProgressChangedEventHandler with some modifections seen below.
//"ie" is our web browser object
ie.ProgressChanged += new WebBrowserProgressChangedEventHandler(_ie);
private void _ie(object sender, WebBrowserProgressChangedEventArgs e)
{
int max = (int)Math.Max(e.MaximumProgress, e.CurrentProgress);
int min = (int)Math.Min(e.MaximumProgress, e.CurrentProgress);
if (min.Equals(max))
{
//Run your code here when page is actually 100% complete
}
}
Simple genius method of going about this, I found this question googling "How to sleep web browser or put to pause"
According to MSDN (contains sample source) you can use the DocumentCompleted event for that. Additional very helpful information and source that shows how to differentiate between event invocations can be found here.
what you experiencend happened to me . readyStete.complete doesnt work in some cases. here i used bool in document_completed to check state
button1_click(){
//go site1
wb.Navigate("site1.com");
//wait for documentCompleted before continue to execute any further
waitWebBrowserToComplete(wb);
// set some values in html page
wb.Document.GetElementById("input1").SetAttribute("Value", "hello");
// then click submit. (submit does navigation)
wb.Document.GetElementById("formid").InvokeMember("submit");
// then wait for doc complete
waitWebBrowserToComplete(wb);
var processedHtml = wb.Document.GetElementsByTagName("HTML")[0].OuterHtml;
var rawHtml = wb.DocumentText;
}
// helpers
//instead of checking readState . we get state from DocumentCompleted Event via bool value
bool webbrowserDocumentCompleted = false;
public static void waitWebBrowserToComplete(WebBrowser wb)
{
while (!webbrowserDocumentCompleted )
Application.DoEvents();
webbrowserDocumentCompleted = false;
}
form_load(){
wb.DocumentCompleted += (o, e) => {
webbrowserDocumentCompleted = true;
};
}
In C#, using the System.Windows.Forms.HtmlDocument class (or another class that allows DOM parsing), is it possible to wait until a webpage finishes its javascript manipulations of the HTML before retrieving that HTML? Certain sites add innerhtml to pages through javascript, but those changes do not show up when I parse the HtmlElements of the HtmlDocument.
One possibility would be to update the HtmlDocument of the page after a second. Does anybody know how to do this?
Someone revived this question by posting what I think is an incorrect answer. So, here are my thoughts to address it.
Non-deterministically, it's possible to get close to finding out if the page has finished its AJAX stuff. However, it completely depends on the logic of that particular page: some pages are perpetually dynamic.
To approach this, one can handle DocumentCompleted event first, then asynchronously poll the WebBrowser.IsBusy property and monitor the current HTML snapshot of the page for changes, like below.
The complete sample can be found here.
// get the root element
var documentElement = this.webBrowser.Document.GetElementsByTagName("html")[0];
// poll the current HTML for changes asynchronosly
var html = documentElement.OuterHtml;
while (true)
{
// wait asynchronously, this will throw if cancellation requested
await Task.Delay(500, token);
// continue polling if the WebBrowser is still busy
if (this.webBrowser.IsBusy)
continue;
var htmlNow = documentElement.OuterHtml;
if (html == htmlNow)
break; // no changes detected, end the poll loop
html = htmlNow;
}
In general aswer is "no" - unless script on the page notifies your code in some way you have to simply wait some time and grab HTML. Waiting a second after document ready notification likley will cover most sites (i.e. jQuery's $(code) cases).
You need to give the application a second to process the Java. Simply halting the current thread will delay the java processing as well so your doc will still come up outdated.
WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs cachedLoadArgs;
private void TimerDone(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
((Timer)sender).Stop();
respondToPageLoaded(cachedLoadArgs);
}
void webBrowser1_DocumentCompleted(object sender, WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs e)
{
cachedLoadArgs = e;
System.Windows.Forms.Timer timer = new Timer();
int interval = 1000;
timer.Interval = interval;
timer.Tick += new EventHandler(TimerDone);
timer.Start();
}
What about using 'WebBrowser.Navigated' event?
I made with WEbBrowser take a look at my class:
public class MYCLASSProduct: IProduct
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public double Price { get; set; }
public string Url { get; set; }
private WebBrowser _WebBrowser;
private AutoResetEvent _lock;
public void Load(string url)
{
_lock = new AutoResetEvent(false);
this.Url = url;
browserInitializeBecauseJavascriptLoadThePage();
}
private void browserInitializeBecauseJavascriptLoadThePage()
{
_WebBrowser = new WebBrowser();
_WebBrowser.DocumentCompleted += webBrowser_DocumentCompleted;
_WebBrowser.Dock = DockStyle.Fill;
_WebBrowser.Name = "webBrowser";
_WebBrowser.ScrollBarsEnabled = false;
_WebBrowser.TabIndex = 0;
_WebBrowser.Navigate(Url);
Form form = new Form();
form.Hide();
form.Controls.Add(_WebBrowser);
Application.Run(form);
_lock.WaitOne();
}
private void webBrowser_DocumentCompleted(object sender, WebBrowserDocumentCompletedEventArgs e)
{
HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlDocument hDocument = new HtmlAgilityPack.HtmlDocument();
hDocument.LoadHtml(_WebBrowser.Document.Body.OuterHtml);
this.Price = Convert.ToDouble(hDocument.DocumentNode.SelectNodes("//td[#class='ask']").FirstOrDefault().InnerText.Trim());
_WebBrowser.FindForm().Close();
_lock.Set();
}
if your trying to do this in a console application, you need to put this tag above your main, because Windows needs to communicate with COM Components:
[STAThread]
static void Main(string[] args)
I did not like this solution, But I think that is no one better!