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there have been quiet a few posts on that issue but it seems none realy answer the question I have.

I use TIdHttp to load the source code of this website: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/

I try to extract some data but realized that the data is generated by a script. There is a script on in the source code and a few links to external js files.

How could i possibly run some or all of the scripts on the page and get the source code generated ?

I am using this part in a secondary thread and would like to avoid using a WebBrowser component.

I could extract the scripts or links from the Idhttp generated source code, but running a js file with idhttp.get(*.js) but I presume that would probably be too simple to work.

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    you will need to run the script, which is the exact thing a browser would do, so a webbrowser component seems more appropriate in your case...
    – whosrdaddy
    Sep 3, 2015 at 9:55
  • I have open the webpage in different Browsers (Opera, IE and Firefow). When I have a look at the source code in each Browser, all show me the script but not the content which I am interested in. How could a Browser get me any further ?
    – David K.
    Sep 3, 2015 at 10:41
  • For instance TWebBrowser control is a wrapper around Internet Explorer and as such can run JavaScript. And allows you to manipulate with the final document (through MSHTML).
    – TLama
    Sep 3, 2015 at 11:03
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    You don't want the source code. You want to explore the DOM. Chrome's developer tools let you do that interactively, which might help you determine what code to write in your program. Sep 3, 2015 at 12:32
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    You have already loaded the source code and confirmed that the information you want isn't there. Thus, you don't want the source code. You're under the mistaken impression that the page's JavaScript modifies the source code. It doesn't do that, though. It directly modifies the browser's internal representation of the page's structure, which is presented as the DOM. Thus, again, you want access to the DOM. The DOM offers structured access to the page's data. Wouldn't you prefer that over parsing HTML, anyway? Parsing is always a pain. Sep 3, 2015 at 15:28

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Finally, the answer have been very basic :

document := webBrowser.Document as IHTMLDocument2; result := document.body.innerHTML;

That retrieves the source code and include the content generated dynamically at runtime by scripts.

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  • That was the first thing that TLama said no?
    – whosrdaddy
    Sep 3, 2015 at 14:47

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