pdaughe 0 Report post Posted March 18, 2009 I note that _IEPropertyGet does not establish an AutoIT COM error handler. I get an unhandled COM error when I attempt to retrieve a document's "title". According to the documentation, I shouldn't have to explicity call __IEInternalErrorHandlerRegister(), should I? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DaleHohm 59 Report post Posted March 18, 2009 No, but you can call _IEErrorHandlerRegister() instead. I attempted to trap COM errors in the most common places, but have not yet made it a goal to capture all possibilities. For these cases, please use _IEErrorHandlerRegister() 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
pdaughe 0 Report post Posted March 18, 2009 No, but you can call _IEErrorHandlerRegister() instead. I attempted to trap COM errors in the most common places, but have not yet made it a goal to capture all possibilities. For these cases, please use _IEErrorHandlerRegister() DaleThanks Dale--I wasn't sure if you were aware that you didn't set the error handler in IEPropteryGet... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites