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With the advent of IE11, IHTMLWindow2::execScript() is deprecated. The recommended approach is to use eval() instead. I'm automating IE via its C++ COM interfaces, and I have been unable to find how to accomplish this. Can someone point me to the example I've obviously missed in my searching? If it's not possible to execute code via eval, what's the appropriate way to inject JavaScript code into a running instance of Internet Explorer now that execScript is no longer available?

EDIT: Any solution that will work for the project I'm working on must work out-of-process. I am not using a Browser Helper Object (BHO), or any type of IE plugin. Thus, any solution that involves an interface that cannot be properly marshaled cross-process won't work for me.

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    My guess is that you'd do it like you would in JavaScript, by adding a new script element to the DOM of the page, but I'm checking with the IE dev team...
    – EricLaw
    Aug 20, 2013 at 22:46
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    @JimEvans, I don't have IE11 installed to try, but the following works for IE10 using eval: CComDispatchDriver window = m_window; /* of IHTMLWindow2 */ window.Invoke1(L"eval", &CComVariant(L"alert(true)"));
    – noseratio
    Aug 21, 2013 at 0:20

1 Answer 1

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I have now verified the eval approach works consistently with IE9, IE10 and IE11 (error checks skipped for breavity):

CComVariant result;
CComDispatchDriver disp = m_htmlWindow; // of IHTMLWindow2
disp.Invoke1(L"eval", &CComVariant(L"confirm('See this?')"), &result);
result.ChangeType(VT_BSTR);
MessageBoxW(V_BSTR(&result));

Feels even better than execScript, because it actually returns the result. It works also in C# with WinForms' WebBrowser:

var result = webBrowser1.Document.InvokeScript("eval", new object[] { "confirm('see this?')" });
MessageBox.Show(result.ToString());

That said, execScript still works for IE11 Preview:

CComVariant result;
m_htmlWindow->execScript(CComBSTR(L"confirm('See this too?')"), CComBSTR(L"JavaScript"), &result);
result.ChangeType(VT_BSTR);
MessageBoxW(V_BSTR(&result));

And it still discards the result, as it always did.

A bit off-topic, but you don't have to stick with eval for this. This approach allows to execute any named method available inside the namespace of the JavaScript window object of the loaded page (via IDispatch interface). You may call your own function and pass a live COM object into it, rather than a string parameter, e.g.:

// JavaScript
function AlertUser(user)
{
  alert(user.name);
  return user.age;
}

// C++
CComDispatchDriver disp = m_htmlWindow; // of IHTMLWindow2
disp.Invoke1(L"AlertUser", &CComVariant(userObject), &result);

I'd prefer the above direct call to eval where possible.

[EDITED]

It takes some tweaks to make this approach work for out-of-process calls. As @JimEvans pointed out in the comments, Invoke was returning error 0x80020006 ("Unknown name"). However, a test HTA app worked just fine, what made me think to try IDispatchEx::GetDispId for name resolution. That indeed worked (error checks skipped):

CComDispatchDriver dispWindow;
htmlWindow->QueryInterface(&dispWindow);

CComPtr<IDispatchEx> dispexWindow;
htmlWindow->QueryInterface(&dispexWindow);

DISPID dispidEval = -1;
dispexWindow->GetDispID(CComBSTR("eval"), fdexNameCaseSensitive, &dispidEval);
dispWindow.Invoke1(dispidEval, &CComVariant("function DoAlert(text) { alert(text); }")); // inject

DISPID dispidDoAlert = -1;
dispexWindow->GetDispID(CComBSTR("DoAlert"), fdexNameCaseSensitive, &dispidDoAlert) );
dispWindow.Invoke1(dispidDoAlert, &CComVariant("Hello, World!")); // call

The full C++ test app is here: http://pastebin.com/ccZr0cG2

[UPDATE]

This update creates __execScript method on a window object of a child iframe, out-of-proc. The code to be injected was optimized to return the target window object for later use (no need to make a series of out-of-proc calls to obtain the iframe object, it's done in the context of the main window):

CComBSTR __execScriptCode(L"(window.__execScript = function(exp) { return eval(exp); }, window.self)");

Below is the code for C++ console app (pastebin), some error checks skipped for breavity. There's also a corresponding prototype in .HTA, which is more readable.

//
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18342200/how-do-i-call-eval-in-ie-from-c/18349546//
//

#include <tchar.h>
#include <ExDisp.h>
#include <mshtml.h>
#include <dispex.h>
#include <atlbase.h>
#include <atlcomcli.h>

#define _S(a) \
    { HRESULT hr = (a); if (FAILED(hr)) return hr; } 

#define disp_cast(disp) \
    ((CComDispatchDriver&)(void(static_cast<IDispatch*>(disp)), reinterpret_cast<CComDispatchDriver&>(disp)))

struct ComInit {
    ComInit() { ::CoInitialize(NULL); }
    ~ComInit() { CoUninitialize(); }
};

int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
    ComInit comInit;

    CComPtr<IWebBrowser2> ie;
    _S( ie.CoCreateInstance(L"InternetExplorer.Application", NULL, CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER) );
    _S( ie->put_Visible(VARIANT_TRUE) );
    CComVariant ve;
    _S( ie->Navigate2(&CComVariant(L"http://jsfiddle.net/"), &ve, &ve, &ve, &ve) );

    // wait for page to finish loading
    for (;;)
    {
        Sleep(250);
        READYSTATE rs = READYSTATE_UNINITIALIZED;
        ie->get_ReadyState(&rs);
        if ( rs == READYSTATE_COMPLETE )
            break;
    }

    // inject __execScript into the main window

    CComPtr<IDispatch> dispDoc;
    _S( ie->get_Document(&dispDoc) );
    CComPtr<IHTMLDocument2> htmlDoc;
    _S( dispDoc->QueryInterface(&htmlDoc) );
    CComPtr<IHTMLWindow2> htmlWindow;
    _S( htmlDoc->get_parentWindow(&htmlWindow) );
    CComPtr<IDispatchEx> dispexWindow;
    _S( htmlWindow->QueryInterface(&dispexWindow) );

    CComBSTR __execScript("__execScript");
    CComBSTR __execScriptCode(L"(window.__execScript = function(exp) { return eval(exp); }, window.self)");

    DISPID dispid = -1;
    _S( dispexWindow->GetDispID(CComBSTR("eval"), fdexNameCaseSensitive, &dispid) );
    _S( disp_cast(dispexWindow).Invoke1(dispid, &CComVariant(__execScriptCode)) ); 

    // inject __execScript into the child frame

    WCHAR szCode[1024];
    wsprintfW(szCode, L"document.all.tags(\"iframe\")[0].contentWindow.eval(\"%ls\")", __execScriptCode.m_str);

    dispid = -1;
    _S( dispexWindow->GetDispID(__execScript, fdexNameCaseSensitive, &dispid) );
    CComVariant vIframe;
    _S( disp_cast(dispexWindow).Invoke1(dispid, &CComVariant(szCode), &vIframe) ); // inject __execScript and return the iframe's window object
    _S( vIframe.ChangeType(VT_DISPATCH) );

    CComPtr<IDispatchEx> dispexIframe;
    _S( V_DISPATCH(&vIframe)->QueryInterface(&dispexIframe) );

    dispid = -1;
    _S( dispexIframe->GetDispID(__execScript, fdexNameCaseSensitive, &dispid) );
    _S( disp_cast(dispexIframe).Invoke1(dispid, &CComVariant("alert(document.URL)")) ); // call the code inside child iframe

    return 0;
}
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    Your solution is fine as far as it goes, but it doesn't completely meet my needs. Attempting to execute script in the context of a frame/iframe won't work. IDispatchEx::GetDispID returns the same "Unknown name" HRESULT for the IHTMLWindow2 object associated with the frame.
    – JimEvans
    Aug 23, 2013 at 13:48
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    Could you elaborate how you obtain the frame's window IHTMLWindow2 object out-of-proc? I've tried browser.Document.all.tags("iframe")[0].contentWindow and I'm getting Permission denied on the last step - contentWindow (IE10).
    – noseratio
    Aug 23, 2013 at 14:21
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    That should work, and does in my environment, as long as you don't cross any Protected Mode boundaries along the way. The full code of my project is available on GitHub, in particular, in the IEDriverServer project therein. The DocumentHost class contains the code used to change frame focus.
    – JimEvans
    Aug 23, 2013 at 14:44
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    @wilx i'm a little late, but you can keep using execScript: stackoverflow.com/a/31605264/1160796
    – basher
    Nov 5, 2018 at 23:01
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    @basher, yeah they now have WebDriver for Edge which they promise to keep updating along side with Edge. But there is another emerging trend: ElectronJS. That allows to abandon the IE legacy and wrap the whole web app with a Desktop envelop so it will run not only on Win7 but also on Mac an Linux, using the cutting-edge web standards (including async/await that you liked). I'm jumping on that wagon, too ;-)
    – noseratio
    Nov 7, 2018 at 0:24

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