M
Mike Gale
I've not used Infopath myself but it may be interfering with a jQuery driven
web site that I monitor.
I keep an eye on a web site that uses an aspx web page, substantially driven
through jQuery, to communicate with a back end WCF web service.
I monitor behaviour on the page, including logging when unexpected things
happen.
A common theme among IE issues, seems to be that the browser has Infopath
installed.
I'd like to know:
Are there known issues between Infopath and jQuery?
Is there a way to easily investigate such issues without installing Infopath?
What solutions are there? (Like, maybe, an existing web page that tells
users how to temporarily disable Infopath so that they can complete the form,
then switch it back on.)
(The site is currently running jQuery 1.3.2. This is not going to change
soon.)
web site that I monitor.
I keep an eye on a web site that uses an aspx web page, substantially driven
through jQuery, to communicate with a back end WCF web service.
I monitor behaviour on the page, including logging when unexpected things
happen.
A common theme among IE issues, seems to be that the browser has Infopath
installed.
I'd like to know:
Are there known issues between Infopath and jQuery?
Is there a way to easily investigate such issues without installing Infopath?
What solutions are there? (Like, maybe, an existing web page that tells
users how to temporarily disable Infopath so that they can complete the form,
then switch it back on.)
(The site is currently running jQuery 1.3.2. This is not going to change
soon.)