To use this plugin, simply go into its settings and add a new frame, either from a preset shipped with the plugin, or a custom one that you can edit yourself. Each frame's pane can be opened using the "Custom Frames: Open" command.
You can also display your custom frames in your Markdown documents. Custom Frames adds a special code block syntax that transforms the code block into a custom frame in Live Preview and Reading mode. Your code block should look like this:
~~~
```custom-frames
frame: YOUR FRAME'S NAME
```
~~~
Optionally, you can also pass custom style settings to the embed, which allows you to change things like the embed's height:
Unfortunately, Obsidian Mobile does not run on [Electron](https://www.electronjs.org/), which is what allows iframes and [webviews](https://www.electronjs.org/docs/latest/api/webview-tag) to be displayed with very few restrictions related to cookies, cross-origin resource sharing, and so on. This means that a lot of sites won't work there, especially ones that you have to log in to. However, when you create a frame, you can toggle the "Disable on Mobile" option to hide a Desktop-only frame in Obsidian mobile.
If you create a frame that you think other people would like, don't hesitate to create a pull request with [a new preset](https://github.com/Ellpeck/ObsidianCustomFrames/blob/master/src/settings.ts#L5).
There are a few known issues with Custom Frames. If you encounter any of these, please **don't** report it on the issue tracker.
- In older versions of Obsidian, specifically **0.14.2 and lower**, a lot of websites don't function properly in custom frames. This is due to these older versions not having features in place that allow for frames to have special, additional functionality related to cookies and headers.
- When dragging or moving a pane, hovering the mouse over a custom frame will cause it to get stuck or behave unexpectedly. This is an issue with Obsidian itself, which is being investigated.
Thanks to [lishid](https://github.com/lishid) for their help with making iframes work in Obsidian for a purpose like this. Also thanks to them for *motivating* me to turn Obsidian Keep into a more versatile plugin, which is how Custom Frames was born.