If this was a web application, would there be another way of doing
this? Or would the web application also have to host the page in an
iFrame or something?

On Mar 13, 12:45 am, Andrew Badera <and...@badera.us> wrote:
> Host a webpage in your desktop app for those purposes.
>
> --ab
>
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 7:36 PM, P L <homerthesimp...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi,
> > The desktop application I'm working on is used to customize your
> > Twitter page. Therefore, any changes you make in the app can be seen
> > in your Twitter page. However, at the moment, everytime the user makes
> > a change, they have to open the browser and refresh. I thought it
> > would be nicer to simply show the changes in real time without the
> > updating.
>
> > On Mar 13, 12:17 am, Andrew Badera <and...@badera.us> wrote:
> >> 1) No, don't think there is ...
> >> 2) Why do you need to "refresh the page" in a forced fashion in a
> >> desktop app? If you're running a web control with the page in it,
> >> refresh it ... if you're talking about any/all instances of the
> >> browser page ... well, why?
>
> >> ∞ Andy Badera
> >> ∞ +1 518-641-1280 Google Voice
> >> ∞ This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private
> >> ∞ Google me:http://www.google.com/search?q=andrew%20badera
>
> >> On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 5:02 PM, P L <homerthesimp...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> > Hey all,
> >> >  I'm using the Twitter API for a desktop application. Is there a way
> >> > of sending a POST header (or something) that will automatically
> >> > refresh the page after an action has been performed? For example, I
> >> > can update the user's profile picture via my app, but the change can't
> >> > be seen until I manually refresh the page. Is there a way, maybe with
> >> > AJAX (?), to update the page automatically once the profile picture
> >> > has been changed?
>
> >> > Thanks for any help
>
> >> > P Louw

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