I have a page with an iframe, and the iframe contains code that needs to run in quirks mode (it\'s Microsoft\'s Outlook Web Access, so it\'s not our code that we could fix a
You should be able to have differing compat modes between the IFrame and the host - see: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/cjacks/archive/2010/12/01/does-a-standards-web-page-inside-of-an-iframe-in-a-quirks-web-page-render-in-standards-or-quirks.aspx
You can specify the compat mode you want explicity, even more than you can with the button, using the X-UA-Compatible tag: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc288325(VS.85).aspx
HTH.
I had your same issue and researched it fairly extensively back in April 2011. As of then, the only way to have a top-level document in "standards mode" and a document in a child iframe in "quirks mode" in IE9 was to use a meta tag to have the browser behave as if it were IE8. (As far as I know, this is still the case and Microsoft has no intention to change it.) There are a variety of meta tags you can use to change browser mode, but the one I have used that has worked was:
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=8" />
If you include this meta tag, all of the documents should be properly rendered (per IE8 rules) according to their doctype.
Note, however, that this precludes you from using any of the newly supported css features in IE9, even in the top-level document. You won't be able to use border-radius, box-shadow, opacity, etc..
There's some more info on this at Will an iframe render in quirks mode?, which asks a more general question about iframes and doctypes in ie.
BTW, the quirks mode for content embedded in an iframe is not exactly the same as normal quirks mode. See this: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg558056(v=VS.85).aspx