Yep QWebView seems to have only high level interaction with the page:
http://doc.qt.nokia.com/4.7-snapshot/qwebview.html

Cheers, chr

On Jun 11, 3:51 pm, Stephan Beal <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 11:03 AM, Alexander Shabanov
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > I'm not sure whether it solves your problem or not - but you can use Qt.
>
> > It is shipped with QtWebKit module that provides fully functional
> > browser components, e.g. renderer, and bundled js engine.
>
> > Native code-to-js bindings in Qt is really simple and straightforward
> > (in fact there is no need to write glue code, MOC introduces some sort
> > of "reflection" capabilities to Qt classes what makes them usable from
> > scripts without writing even a line of binding code).
>
> That is generically true, but last i checked (Qt 4.4, i think) QtWebKit does
> NOT provide a way for clients to bind to the JS code running in the browser.
> i was at Qt Dev Days 2 summers ago, where it was explained that the JS
> engine used in the WebKit code was NOT the same as QtScript, and there was
> no way for clients to hook into it. Maybe that's been resolved since then.
>
> > I heard that Nokia planned to replace their js engine with v8 but I'm
> > not sure whether it is at least prototyped.
>
> At Qt DevDays i explicitly asked the Qt developers if my QtScript-based code
> was in any danger of being obsoleted by Qt dropping their QtScript engine in
> favour of the one in WebKit. i was told "no", and that my QtScript-based
> code was future-proof. It now seems that they hadn't foreseen the rise of
> v8.
>
> --
> ----- stephan bealhttp://wanderinghorse.net/home/stephan/

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