Can this be done by adding HTML code, to request the page from server instead of from cache, each time the page loads?
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What exactly do you mean by "user" - do you mean the browser's automated caching mechanism, or the user actively saving the page on their machine?– PekkaFeb 5, 2012 at 13:38
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What do you mean by 'I can't access the server'? Aren't your page loaded from server?– Vadim GulyakinFeb 5, 2012 at 13:39
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m using the server of some other site– RushabhFeb 5, 2012 at 14:24
4 Answers
The only working option is to never use the same URL twice which is done by adding a fake request parameter with random value.
Most client side AJAX frameworks do this.
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Append it to the URL with JavaScript. Try this: stackoverflow.com/questions/4667927/…– MatthewFeb 5, 2012 at 15:37
You can use these meta tags :
<meta http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate">
<meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache">
<meta http-equiv="Expires" content="0">
Add this in the <head>
section of the page
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2(Note this is not supported by all browsers. The server-side header is the only fully-reliable way.)– bobinceFeb 5, 2012 at 13:43
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According to W3C Schools it is supported by all major browsers: w3schools.com/tags/att_meta_http_equiv.asp– DrahkarFeb 5, 2012 at 13:54
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3
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1
http-equiv="content-type"
works on all browsers, but other headers don't necessarily. Many headers have to be processed before HTML parsing starts, which would precludemeta
from affecting them.content-type
is special-cased and yeah, it's a bit misleading and ugly in the way it repurposes what was originally intended to be a server-side processing directive. (That's why HTML5 encourages<meta charset="utf-8">
instead... though I would stick withhttp-equiv
for that for the moment due to better support in older browsers.)– bobinceFeb 5, 2012 at 14:12
To avoid caching you can append the timestamp as a parameter
var timestamp = new Date().getTime()
//append it to an url when you make an ajax call or to a link
var myLink = document.getElementByID('yourlink');
myLink.href = myLink.href + '&nocache='+timestamp;
In the head section, you can add the no-cache directive. When Cache-Control: no-cache is set, the browser will send the http request to the server and validate before releasing a cached copy.
<meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache">
You use the Expires directive and set the time to a value that is before the request time, which will make the browser request the server for every subsequent request. The max-age directive is also similar to Expires and can be used for this.
<meta http-equiv="Expires" content=-10>
Take a look here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_header_fields#Avoiding_caching