ID: Q193984
The information in this article applies to:
When you click a hyperlink in your browser, another instance of the browser is loaded.
An invalid frame name was specified as the target frame for the hyperlink. An invalid name is a name that does not reference a frame in the current frame set.
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article.
Most Web browsers allow you to target different frames within a frame set. Assigning a target frame that exists within the context of the current frame set activates this feature.
When a frame is assigned as a target, the name must exactly match a frame that exists in the current frame set (note that these names are case-sensitive). If the name of the frame is incorrect, a new instance of the browser will be loaded.
For example, a frame set page with two frames aligned vertically where the left frame is named "content" and the right frame is named "main." If you want a hyperlink that is activated in the "content" frame to load a specified page in the "main" frame, you must specify "main" as the target frame.
If, however, you set a link in the "content" frame to display a page in the "Main" frame (and you use an uppercase "M" instead of a lowercase "M"), a separate instance of the Web browser will be started.
For more information about frames and frame sets, click the Index tab in FrontPage Help, type the following text
frames pages, creating
double-click "overview," and then double-click the "About Frames and Frames
Pages" topic.
Additional query words: html
Keywords : fpedit
Version : WINDOWS:
Platform : WINDOWS
Hardware : x86
Issue type : kbbug
Solution Type : kbpending
Last Reviewed: July 1, 1999