If I load some content with ajax (jQuery) which has a script tag in it, jQuery 1.5 adds the timestamp to the script tag src url. See example bellow.

Example: content what I load with ajax:

<div>text1</div>
<script type="text/javascript" src="/js/abc-xyz.js?r=1.1"></script>

This is the src url from where it loads the script code after I insert the previous content to the page:

.../js/abc-xyz.js?r=1.1&_=1297892228466

Does anybody knows why this happening? It happens only with jQuery 1.5. It doesn't happen with jQuery 1.4.4.

Code Example:

$.ajax({
    url: content.html,
    type: 'GET',
    data: someDataObject,
    success: function(data) {
        // some code here

    },
    error: function(data) {
        // some code here
    }
});

Thanks.

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80% accept rate
If i have to take a wild gess i would say it adds the get parameter to prevent the js file from loading from cache. Cant think of any other reason atm. But this should not break any functionality. – Michael Feb 16 '11 at 21:54
That's what I would imagine. I do the same thing manually so I guess i can stop doing that. – Dutchie432 Feb 16 '11 at 21:55
Could you show your Javascript? – lonesomeday Feb 16 '11 at 21:58
I added JavaScript code example. – Norbert Tamas Feb 16 '11 at 22:04
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2 Answers

Michael is correct in his comment, and if you want to disable it, use: cache: true in the ajax request. To enable, use cache: false (which I believe is default).

To disable the timestamp:

$.ajax({
    url: content.html,
    cache: true,
    type: 'GET',
    data: someDataObject,
    success: function(data) {
        // some code here

    },
    error: function(data) {
        // some code here
    }
});
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I know how to control caching. My problem is that ads the timestampt to the script src url which was loaded with ajax. – Norbert Tamas Feb 16 '11 at 22:07
This worked for me. Thanks! – kikito Oct 18 '11 at 11:41
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up vote 2 down vote accepted

See bellow the answer what I got back from jQuery team. Ticket #8298: http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/8298

Answer:

After checking your report and your code samples I come to the conclusion that this isn't a bug. I also made this test case jQuery 1.4+ (until 1.5) had a bug which caused the cache option not to default to false for script requests. This bug (see #7578) has been fixed in 1.5 . Now what you might know or not know is, that jQuery does special-handle script tags when doing DOM manipulations (to prevent certain errors in IE). It filters them out and requests them via ajax. This explains why even a "normal" inline script tag suddenly is requested with additional url parameters. There are ways to work around this if it has unwanted side effects for you.

  1. use $.ajaxSetup({ cache: true }) when appropriate

  2. use a prefilter for script requests and e.g. check for urls where you don't want the random parameter to be added and set cache: true in the prefilter for those

  3. in e.g. the success call back handle the script tags yourself by doing something along these lines var elems = $(htmlwithscripttags); elems.filter("script") //now do whatever with the scripts elems.filter(":not(script)").appendTo("body"); //e.g.

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