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I had this script in <head> of my website:

function check_messages() {
$('#messages').load('/check.php?tt='+(new Date()).getTime(),
function(responseText, textStatus, XMLHttpRequest) {
if(responseText != "") {
$("html,body").scrollTop("messages",0);
}
});
}
var auto_refresh = setInterval(check_messages, 180000);

Now I moved this function to external javascript file. The file is about 20 KB.

This script contains timestamp and I want to be sure that browsers will use cached version of this javascript? Will they? I don't want them to load the whole 20 KB script again and again.

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  • Why are you adding a timestamp? Usually the whole point is to be a "cache buster".
    – jmar777
    Apr 4, 2013 at 12:38
  • You should do that on the serverside, checking a timestamp to see that no new messages have been added, and return a response that only includes new messages etc.
    – adeneo
    Apr 4, 2013 at 12:40
  • I have read that without timestamp the script may show the cached version of check.php. I am wrong? Apr 4, 2013 at 12:41
  • 1
    Ahh... so you're worried about the script itself not being cached because it in turn requests a non-cached check.php? If that's the case, no worries. As long as you have the appropriate caching headers configured on the server there's nothing about your .load() call that will mess with the script itself being cached.
    – jmar777
    Apr 4, 2013 at 12:44
  • The javascript itself needs to be cached but it may not show cached result of check.php file. Apr 4, 2013 at 12:47

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