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I am working on an iGoogle-like application. Content from other applications (on other domains) is shown using iframes.

How do I resize the iframes to fit the height of the iframes' content?

I've tried to decipher the javascript Google uses but it's obfuscated, and searching the web has been fruitless so far.

Update: Please note that content is loaded from other domains, so the same-origin policy applies.

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any good answers to this ? I am stumbling over this too. – andyk Oct 30 '08 at 11:24

9 Answers

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We had this type of problem, but slightly in reverse to your situation - we were providing the iframed content to sites on other domains, so the same origin policy was also an issue. After many hours spent trawling google, we eventually found a (somewhat..) workable solution, which you may be able to adapt to your needs.

There is a way around the same origin policy, but it requires changes on both the iframed content and the framing page, so if you haven't the ability to request changes on both sides, this method won't be very useful to you, i'm afraid.

There's a browser quirk which allows us to skirt the same origin policy - javascript can communicate either with pages on it's own domain, or with pages it has iframed, but never pages in which it is framed, e.g. if you have:

 www.foo.com/home.html, which iframes
 |-> www.bar.net/framed.html, which iframes
 |----> www.foo.com/helper.html

then home.html can communicate with framed.html (iframed) and helper.html (same domain).

 Communication options for each page:
 +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-------------+
 |                         | home.html | framed.html | helper.html |
 +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-------------+
 | www.foo.com/home.html   |    N/A    |     YES     |     YES     |
 | www.bar.net/framed.html |    NO     |     N/A     |     YES     |
 | www.foo.com/helper.html |    YES    |     YES     |     N/A     |
 +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-------------+

framed.html can send messages to helper.html (iframed) but not home.html (child can't communicate cross-domain with parent).

The key here is that helper.html can receive messages from framed.html, and can also communicate with home.html.

So essentially, when framed.html loads, it works out it's own height, tells helper.html, which passes the message on to home.html, which can then resize the iframe in which framed.html sits.

The simplest way we found to pass messages from framed.html to helper.html was through a URL argument. To do this, framed.html has an iframe with src='' specified. When it's onload fires, it evaluates it's own height, and sets the src of the iframe at this point to helper.html?height=N

There's an explanation here of how facebook handle it, which may be slightly clearer than mine above!


Code

In www.foo.com/home.html, the following javascript code is required (this can be loaded from a .js file on any domain, incidentally..):

<script>
  // Resize iframe to full height
  function resizeIframe(height)
  {
    // "+60" is a general rule of thumb to allow for differences in
    // IE & and FF height reporting, can be adjusted as required..
    document.getElementById('frame_name_here').height = parseInt(height)+60;
  }
</script>
<iframe id='frame_name_here' src='http://www.bar.net/framed.html'></iframe>

In www.bar.net/framed.html:

<body onload="iframeResizePipe()">
<iframe id="helpframe" src='' height='0' width='0' frameborder='0'></iframe>

<script type="text/javascript">
  function iframeResizePipe()
  {
     // What's the page height?
     var height = document.body.scrollHeight;

     // Going to 'pipe' the data to the parent through the helpframe..
     var pipe = document.getElementById('helpframe');

     // Cachebuster a precaution here to stop browser caching interfering
     pipe.src = 'http://www.foo.com/helper.html?height='+height+'&cacheb='+Math.random();

  }
</script>

Contents of www.foo.com/helper.html:

<html> 
<!-- 
This page is on the same domain as the parent, so can
communicate with it to order the iframe window resizing
to fit the content 
--> 
  <body onload="parentIframeResize()"> 
    <script> 
      // Tell the parent iframe what height the iframe needs to be
      function parentIframeResize()
      {
         var height = getParam('height');
         // This works as our parent's parent is on our domain..
         parent.parent.resizeIframe(height);
      }

      // Helper function, parse param from request string
      function getParam( name )
      {
        name = name.replace(/[\[]/,"\\\[").replace(/[\]]/,"\\\]");
        var regexS = "[\\?&]"+name+"=([^&#]*)";
        var regex = new RegExp( regexS );
        var results = regex.exec( window.location.href );
        if( results == null )
          return "";
        else
          return results[1];
      }
    </script> 
  </body> 
</html>
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+1 for the detailed explanation of WHY this works – aardvark Jan 8 at 15:23
trully full of insight. I was wondering why igoogle.com had a helper.html file! Thanks – NTulip Jan 12 at 20:54
Just one thing! When the swf goes back to it's normal size, how are you going to resize the iframe? Do you have the iframeResizePipe on a timer or is it called again by the swf? In my company when have call to js in the swf so we know exactly when it changes size – AntonioCS Jan 18 at 21:45
1  
Awesome, thanks! I made a couple additions: Use jQuery to get the body height in framed.html (FF issue, body kept growing): var height = $(document.body).height(); Used a body onload event to create the frame in home.html similar to your approach in framed.html. Addresses not updating the frame on refresh in FF and Safari. – Abdullah Jibaly Aug 31 at 16:50
vote up 1 vote down

The solution on http://www.phinesolutions.com/use-jquery-to-adjust-the-iframe-height.html works great (uses jQuery):

<script type=”text/javascript”>
$(document).ready(function() {
var theFrame = $(”#iFrameToAdjust”, parent.document.body);
theFrame.height($(document.body).height() + 30);
});
</script>

I don't know that you need to add 30 to the length... 1 worked for me.

FYI: If you already have a "height" attribute on your iFrame, this just adds style="height: xxx". This might not be what you want.

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But does it work cross-domain? – aardvark Jan 7 at 15:29
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Try this code it will solve the problem completely and it's simple:

<script language="JavaScript">
<!--
function autoResize(id){
    var newheight;
    var newwidth;

    if(document.getElementById){
        newheight=document.getElementById(id).contentWindow.document .body.scrollHeight;
        newwidth=document.getElementById(id).contentWindow.document .body.scrollWidth;
    }

    document.getElementById(id).height= (newheight) + "px";
    document.getElementById(id).width= (newwidth) + "px";
}
//-->
</script>

<IFRAME SRC="usagelogs/default.aspx" width="100%" height="200px" id="iframe1" marginheight="0" frameborder="0" onLoad="autoResize('iframe1');"></iframe>
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Nice script but not cross-domain. – Sohnee Jul 27 at 10:46
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TinyMCE does this and it is not obfuscated.

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You're being generous ;) – eyelidlessness Nov 1 '08 at 5:41
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This is slightly tricky as you have to know when the iframe page has loaded, which is difficuly when you're not in control of its content. Its possible to add an onload handler to the iframe, but I've tried this in the past and it has vastly different behaviour across browsers (not guess who's the most annoying...). You'd probably have to add a function to the iframe page that performs the resize and inject some script into the content that either listens to load events or resize events, which then calls the previous function. I'm thinking add a function to the page since you want to make sure its secure, but I have no idea how easy it will be to do.

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vote up 0 vote down

Something on the lines of this i belive should work.

parent.document.getElementById(iFrameID).style.height=framedPage.scrollHeight;

Load this with your body onload on the iframe content.

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That is not possible as the content in the iFrames is loaded from other domains, so trying to do that results in an error, such as this from Firefox: "Permission denied to get property Window.document". – larssg Sep 30 '08 at 14:23
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iGoogle gadgets have to actively implement resizing, so my guess is in a cross-domain model you can't do this without the remote content taking part in some way. If your content can send a message with the new size to the container page using typical cross-domain communication techniques, then the rest is simple.

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vote up 0 vote down

there is a bug with this code. when used with firefox and safari, the height continues to grow as you click through the iframe. it doesn't occur in IE. Give it a shot and you'll see!

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vote up 0 vote down

Great code but does not always work with all types of Browser/Server types.

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