Quoting Shachar Shemesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I have not checked this particular site, but the symptoms sound > identical to a problem I've seen not long ago. It seems that when you > tell IE (and maybe konqi) to look for a function in the parent, it will > also look for it in other children of the parent. If you have address A > that opens in frame B and C, in IE you can, from C, call > "parent.func()", where parent.func is defined in B. If anyone can find > me the exact clause in the docs that this violates, however, I'll be > much obliged. I don't know what happened to the list yesterday, and why my message didn't arrive. In that message, I mentioned the reason for the problem, and that is the use of document.all (tfu!). First thing to do when you suspect a bogus Javascript is to go to Mozilla's Tools menu, and from "Web development" choose "Javascript Console". Clear whatever's in it, then click the problem button. Any errors will appear in the console. I can't imagine how people can live with browsers that don't have this feature... Herouth ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
