Fungovanie tejto stránky je z dôvodu údržby dočasne obmedzené. Ak článok nevyrieši váš problém a chcete položiť otázku, napíšte našej komunite podpory na Twitter @FirefoxSupport alebo Reddit /r/firefox.

Vyhľadajte odpoveď

Vyhnite sa podvodom s podporou. Nikdy vás nebudeme žiadať, aby ste zavolali alebo poslali SMS na telefónne číslo alebo zdieľali osobné informácie. Nahláste prosím podozrivú aktivitu použitím voľby “Nahlásiť zneužitie”.

Ďalšie informácie

An iframe element works weird in Firefox - any ideas why?

  • 2 odpovede
  • 2 majú tento problém
  • 5 zobrazení
  • Posledná odpoveď od legriv

more options

Hey there,

Sorry if this is not the right category, but I couldn't find one that seemed more appropriate. I have a question about the iframe element. My page includes it like this:

<iframe height="0" width="0" src="<some_URL>"></iframe>

within the <head> element. The purpose of this iframe is to peform some work in the background and this is legacy code - nothing that is being currently developed. When I show the page in Mozilla I see a dot in that iframe. When using IE I see nothing, which is expected.

Any ideas why Mozilla would show that dot? I'm using version 19.

Cheers, Dimitar

Hey there, Sorry if this is not the right category, but I couldn't find one that seemed more appropriate. I have a question about the iframe element. My page includes it like this: &lt;iframe height="0" width="0" src="&lt;some_URL&gt;"&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt; within the &lt;head&gt; element. The purpose of this iframe is to peform some work in the background and this is legacy code - nothing that is being currently developed. When I show the page in Mozilla I see a dot in that iframe. When using IE I see nothing, which is expected. Any ideas why Mozilla would show that dot? I'm using version 19. Cheers, Dimitar

Upravil(a) cor-el dňa

Vybrané riešenie

That is caused by a border that Firefox adds by default (style="border: none;")

Čítať túto odpoveď v kontexte 👍 2

Všetky odpovede (2)

more options

Vybrané riešenie

That is caused by a border that Firefox adds by default (style="border: none;")

more options

Thanks a lot cor-el!