Error Creating A Net Component In Your Browser
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are that .Net permissions have not been installed or .Net code is unable to execute in the user's browser. These redirections can lead to confusion if permissions have definitely been configured but DealAxis continues to indicate that the user's setup is dealogic dealaxis incompatible. This type of issue is usually caused by installing permissions for one Internet Explorer zone but
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browsing to DealAxis in another zone. 1. Ensure that the Internet Explorer zone is correct The DealAxis Internet Explorer Zone page describes how to configure and be aware of the Internet Explorer zone when browsing to DealAxis. This needs to match the zone for which permissions have been configured and common reasons for this not being the case are listed below. The DealAxis site has not been added to Trusted Sites. The DealAxis site has been added to Trusted Sites as an http:// URL instead of an https:// URL. The user has upgraded from Internet Explorer 6 to Internet Explorer 7 and has lost Trusted Site details. The user is working from a different PC to usual where DealAxis is not a trusted site. 2. Permissions not installed This type of error results in a message as follows and indicates that the user does not have the correct permissions for the DealAxis zone. If we have established that the user is definitely in the correct zone then we next need to check that .Net permissions actually have been installed for that zone on the user's PC. To check whether .Net permissions have been installed, use the Security Viewer in the DealAxis Client, as described in the Checking DealAxis .Net Permissions page. If permissions are not present they can be installed as described in the Install DealAxis .Net Security Permissions page. Common reasons for .Net permissions not being installed correctly are listed below. The bank's IT department has not rolled out the CASPOL script to this particular user's PC. The user is working from a different PC where the DealAxis .Net permissions have not been installed. The major version of the .Net framework has been upgraded from 1.1 to 2.0 and the .Net permissions have only been installed for .Net 1.1. 3. Error Creating .Net Component If DealAxis is configured incorrectly on either the user's PC or the web server this problem can occur, which means .Net code was unable to execute in the user's browser. This results in the following message and the DealAxis web page is unable to execute .Net code so cannot provide further error details. By far the most common reason for this problem is that users are browsing in the wrong Internet Explorer zone. If you are certain that this is not the case, the following se
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Replacing .NET WebBrowser control with a better browser, like Chrome? up vote 286 down vote http://clienthelp.dealogic.com/help/html/DealAxisClientSetup.htm favorite 142 Is there any relatively easy way to insert a modern browser into a .NET application? As far as I understand, the WebBrowser control is a wrapper for IE, which wouldn't be a problem except that it looks like it is a very old version of IE, with all that entails in terms of CSS screw-ups, potential security risks (if the rendering engine wasn't patched, can I really expect http://stackoverflow.com/questions/790542/replacing-net-webbrowser-control-with-a-better-browser-like-chrome the zillion buffer overflow problems to be fixed?), and other issues. I am using Visual Studio C# (express edition - does it make any difference here?) I would like to integrate a good web browser in my applications. In some, I just use it to handle the user registration process, interface with some of my website's features and other things of that order, but I have another application in mind that will require more err... control. I need: A browser that can integrate inside a window of my application (not a separate window) A good support for CSS, js and other web technologies, on par with any modern browser Basic browser functions like "navigate", "back", "reload"... Liberal access to the page code and output. I was thinking about Chrome, since it comes under the BSD license, but I would be just as happy with a recent version of IE. As much as possible, I would like to keep things simple. The best would be if one could patch the existing WebBrowser control, which does already about 70% of what I need, but I don't think that's possible. I have found an activeX control for Mozilla (http://www.iol.ie/~locka/mozilla/control.htm) but it looks like it's an old version, so it's not necessarily an improvem
deleted and cannot be restored. Page Info Change History (all pages) All Project Updates Issue Tracker Downloads Reviews Source Code Wiki & Documentation Subscribe Welcome! Hello and welcome to the introduction of Awesomium.NET, https://awesomium.codeplex.com/ the official .NET wrapper for Awesomium. In this article, we’ll talk about Awesomium, how it integrates with .NET, and the exciting new possibilities it opens for .NET developers. What is Awesomium? Awesomium is a flexible, windowless, web-browser framework that is meant to be used in your own applications. Think of it as if we took Chrome, chopped it into smaller, re-usable pieces, and served it to error creating you on a nice shiny 32-bit BGRA pixel-buffer platter. It is not an application, it is not a web-browser; it is a tool toadd web-browser-like capabilities to another application. Think of radical new browsing interfaces, multi-touch, HTML UI, in-game browsing, web-page capture, site scraping, automation, and awesome new web-browser mashups. Awesomium is powerful and easy to use (it takes just 7 lines of code to render a error creating a page!) but gives you freedom when you want it. The framework handles almost all the low-level tasks for you (network stack, HTML parsing, JS engine, layout, rendering etc.) but you can absolutely redefine much of the low-level behavior if you’d like (expose methods and data to Javascript, implement your own resource back-end, modify headers, and more). “…I think this balance between ease-of-use and low-level flexibility gives developers the best of both worlds.” Adam Simmons What does this mean for .NET applications? Let’s face it, the default WebBrowser control is fairly restrictive and out-of-date. It’s not much more than a wrapper around an IE ActiveX control and so you inherit all the limitations of Internet Explorer. .NET WebBrowser Source Code //------------------------------------------------------------- // // Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. // // // // Description: // WebBrowser is a wrapper for the webbrowser // activex control // Copied from webbrowser.cs in [....] // // History // 04/17/05 KusumaV Created // 02/22/08 [....] Expose the WebBrowser control // 04/24/08 [....] Implemented hosting the WebOC in the // browser process for IE 7+ Protected // Mode //------------------------------------------------------------- using System; using System.ComponentModel; using System.Runtime.InteropServices; using System.Windows; using MS.Win32; // [...] // namespace System.Windows.Contro