DelStone 1 Posted February 22, 2012 (edited) Is it possible to determine if there has been a change in a browser window (whilst it is hidden/minimised) without using the pixel checksum functions (as they appear to require the browser to be maximised)? Edited February 22, 2012 by delstone Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
somdcomputerguy 103 Posted February 22, 2012 The StringInStr() and _INetGetSource() functions can be used to check if certain text does or doesn't exist. - Bruce /*somdcomputerguy */ If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DaleHohm 65 Posted February 22, 2012 The output from _IEBodyReadText or _IEBodyReadHTML functions can also be compared over time. Dale Free Internet Tools: DebugBar, AutoIt IE Builder, HTTP UDF, MODIV2, IE Developer Toolbar, IEDocMon, Fiddler, HTML Validator, WGet, curlMSDN docs: InternetExplorer Object, Document Object, Overviews and Tutorials, DHTML Objects, DHTML Events, WinHttpRequest, XmlHttpRequest, Cross-Frame Scripting, Office object modelAutomate input type=file (Related)Alternative to _IECreateEmbedded? better: _IECreatePseudoEmbedded Better Better?IE.au3 issues with Vista - WorkaroundsSciTe Debug mode - it's magic: #AutoIt3Wrapper_run_debug_mode=Y Doesn't work needs to be ripped out of the troubleshooting lexicon. It means that what you tried did not produce the results you expected. It begs the questions 1) what did you try?, 2) what did you expect? and 3) what happened instead?Reproducer: a small (the smallest?) piece of stand-alone code that demonstrates your trouble Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DelStone 1 Posted February 25, 2012 Brilliant Dale - so obvious and simple - after 12,000 lines of code, can't see the wood for the trees! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites