the <iframe> tag is an HTML tag that acts like a frame, but within
another page. So you write an extension that parses the tag <daily>
and translates it into an <iframe> tag. (You can't have an iframe
directly because of security stuff. Imagine if trolls could embed
random pages in a wiki)
If you're really confused, I could probably write you a small sample.
On Tue, 07 Dec 2004 08:54:26 +0900, Jean-Christian Imbeault <jci(a)gol.com> wrote:
Jamie Bliss wrote:
From what
I understand, no. One work-around for this may be to use an
IFRAME (not directly
controlled or limited control), which would be
much easier on the server than clearing the cache every night. The
implementation I would suggest is to hard-code the HTML or set up
certain qualifications and filters through which the data has to pass
through.
Just a few questions. How would an IFRAME help? Does it somehow make the
browser not cache its contents?
Also What do you mean by hard-code the HTML? My content is dynamic, I
can't hard-code anything since it gets generate on the fly. I must be
missing your point :)
Jc
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