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Home/ Questions/Q 444671
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T21:17:38+00:00 2026-05-12T21:17:38+00:00

Given the following little snippet: <Grid> <Frame Width=300 Height=300 Background=Blue></Frame> <Frame Width=350 Height=350 Background=Red></Frame>

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Given the following little snippet:

<Grid>
  <Frame Width="300" Height="300" Background="Blue"></Frame>
  <Frame Width="350" Height="350" Background="Red"></Frame>
</Grid>

as expected you don’t get to see the blue frame (it being behind the red one).

However, if you include the source attribute to the blue frame:

<Grid>
  <Frame Width="300" Height="300" Background="Blue" Source="c:\test.htm"></Frame>
  <Frame Width="350" Height="350" Background="Red"></Frame>
</Grid>

it pops itself to the front.

Any idea why and can I prevent it?

thanks

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T21:17:38+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 9:17 pm

    The Frame element with an external source uses in fact the classical IE COM component. Since it’s not directly WPF, it doesn’t participate in the WPF layout and must be “on top” of the WPF layer to be seen, and cannot be rotated or scaled. That’s the same problem you have when using a HwndHost to host win32 content in WPF. See this MSDN page for more information.

    There is no real workaround, but you can try to use WPF Chromium which use Chromium’s engine to directly render web pages as a real WPF element.

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