![]() Strangely though, using JavaScript to re-assign some other iframe to the same src URL caused the Flash to display again! $("#someotheriframe").attr("src",Ī DNN page simply contains too much generated code (ASP.Net, MS Ajax, DNN framework, jQuery, various controls and. It almost worked.Ī new issue occurred: IE9 was not able to display a Flash object once the visibility:hidden style was removed! F12 did not help me to make the object visible again. So I put the code (swf inside iframe) that worked in plain HTML files and added it into a DotNetNuke installation. The only method to set a Flash object hidden and visible again while keeping the object running turns out to be setting a CSS class with visibility:hidden. show() actually does not clear the display: property, but sets it to ‘block’, ‘inline’ etc, which might interfere with other operations, such as addClass(“displaynone”), etc. displaynone class setting display to none ![]() hidden class setting visibility to hidden contains the Flash object inside a div. ![]() ![]()
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