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Is there a standard for what actions F5 and Ctrl+F5 trigger in web browsers?

I once did experiment in IE6 and Firefox 2.x. The F5 refresh would trigger a HTTP request sent to the server with an If-Modified-Since header, while Ctrl+F5 would not have such a header. In my understanding, F5 will try to utilize cached content as much as possible, while Ctrl+F5 is intended to abandon all cached content and just retrieve all content from the servers again.

But today, I noticed that in some of the latest browsers (Chrome, IE8) it doesn't work in this way anymore. Both F5 and Ctrl+F5 send the If-Modified-Since header.

So how is this supposed to work, or (if there is no standard) how do the major browsers differ in how they implement these refresh features?

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  • 12
    FWIW: while this certainly could be a Super User topic, and may even have been intended as somewhat end-user-focused when originally asked, at this point it has been both answered and referenced by programmers and web developers and should probably be left here. SU has several other, more end-user-oriented versions of this already, and doesn't need it...
    – Shog9
    Aug 20, 2010 at 0:07
  • 4
    xkcd.com/1854 Aug 17, 2018 at 4:37
  • I may be crazy but I think ALT+F5 does the same as CTRL+F5.
    – ashleedawg
    Nov 16, 2020 at 5:23
  • @ashleedawg According to my research (see table in my answer) only Opera 9 does something with ALT+F5 but not CTRL+F5, while all other tested browsers does something with CTRL+F5 but not ALT+F5. This is on Windows. What OS and browser was you using?
    – some
    May 18, 2021 at 23:43

6 Answers 6

535

It is up to the browser, but they behave in similar ways.

F5 usually updates the page only if it is modified. Modern browsers send Cache-Control: max-age=0 to tell any cache the maximum amount of time a resource is considered fresh, relative to the time of the request.

CTRL-F5 is used to force an update, disregarding any cache. Modern browsers send Cache-Control: no-cache and Pragma: No-cache

If I remember correctly, it was Netscape that was the first browser to add support for cache-control by adding Pragma: No-cache when you pressed CTRL-F5.

┌───────────┬──────────────┬─────┬─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
│ Version 4 │      F5      │  R  │      CLICK      │ Legend:                      │
│2021 MAY 19├──┬──┬──┬──┬──┼──┬──┼──┬──┬──┬──┬──┬──┤ C = Cache-Control: no-cache  │
│           │  │S │C │A │A │C │C │  │S │C │A │A │C │ I = If-Modified-Since        │
│           │  │H │T │L │L │T │T │  │H │T │L │L │T │ M = Cache-Control: max-age=0 │
│           │  │I │R │T │T │R │R │  │I │R │T │T │R │ N = Not tested               │
│           │  │F │L │  │G │L │L │  │F │L │  │G │L │ P = Pragma: No-cache         │
│           │  │T │  │  │R │  │+ │  │T │  │  │R │+ │ - = ignored                  │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │S │  │  │  │  │  │S │                              │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │H │  │  │  │  │  │H │ With 'CLICK' I refer to a    │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │I │  │  │  │  │  │I │ mouse click on the browsers  │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │F │  │  │  │  │  │F │ refresh-icon.                │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │T │  │  │  │  │  │T │                              │
│           │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │  │ 1: Version 3.0.6 sends I     │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤    and C, but 3.1.6 opens    │
│Brave 1.24 │M │CP│CP│- │- │M │CP│M │CP│CP│M │CP│CP│    the page in a new tab,    │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤    making a normal request   │
│Chrome 1   │MI│MI│MI│- │- │MI│- │MI│MI│MI│MI│MI│N │    with only I.              │
│Chrome 6   │MI│CP│CP│- │- │MI│CP│MI│CP│CP│MI│- │N │ 2: Version 10.62 does        │
│Chrome 90  │M │CP│CP│- │- │M │CP│M │CP│CP│M │CP│CP│    nothing. 9.61 might do C  │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤    unless it was a typo in   │
│Edge 90    │M │CP│CP│- │- │M │CP│M │CP│CP│M │CP│CP│    my old table.             │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤ 3: Opens the currernt tab in │
│Firefox 3.x│MI│- │CP│- │- │MI│CP│MI│CP│1 │M │MI│N │    a new tab, but does not   │
│Firefox 89 │M │- │CP│- │M │M │CP│M │CP│3 │M │M │3 │    refresh the page if it is │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤    cached in the browser.    │
│MSIE 8, 7  │I │- │C │- │I │I │  │I │I │C │I │I │N │                              │
├───────────┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┤                              │
│Opera 10, 9│C │- │- │2 │- │C │- │C │C │C │C │- │N │                              │
│Opera 76   │M │CP│CP│- │- │M │- │M │CP│CP│M │CP│CP│                              │
├───────────┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──┴──────────────────────────────┤
│                    https://stackoverflow.com/a/385491/36866                     │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Note about Chrome 6.0.472: If you do a forced reload (like CTRL-F5) it behaves like the url is internally marked to always do a forced reload. The flag is cleared if you go to the address bar and press enter.

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    @Joel Coehoorn: Updated the table with click on the refresh button. Got to love ASCII graphic tables, don't you? The color-coding was is just a side-effect of the code color-coding.
    – some
    Feb 20, 2009 at 18:11
  • 11
    Can't you do it as a proper HTML table? Feb 20, 2009 at 18:32
  • 14
    FYI - this answer has actually been referenced on the chrome development/bug tracking boards: code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1906
    – Kip
    Jan 29, 2010 at 19:28
  • 20
    @John Topley: Tables isn't allowed, so the answer is no.
    – some
    Oct 3, 2010 at 23:41
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    @PaulIrish 10 years later, the table is updated. :)
    – some
    May 19, 2021 at 0:11
332

Generally speaking:

F5 may give you the same page even if the content is changed, because it may load the page from cache. But Ctrl+F5 forces a cache refresh, and will guarantee that if the content is changed, you will get the new content.

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  • 93
    Thi is accurate, but note that while Ctrl+F5 will cause the browser to throw out the cache and request a new from the server, the server may ignore the no-cache header and serve a server side cached page. Thus even Ctrl+F5 may return an old version of the page if the server ignores the no-cache header.
    – AaronLS
    Aug 23, 2012 at 20:47
  • F5 wil refresh the page - CTRL+F5 will do 'hard' refresh. Feb 5, 2015 at 13:16
  • Also mention, that Ctrl-F5 will submit a form, if given.
    – jawo
    Aug 20, 2015 at 10:53
  • 1
    Ok, so if you hit ctrl+f5 you tell your browser not to use its cache, but what happens in subsequent requests to the same page? I mean, can you see older versions of the page after you´ve seen the oldest one? If i´m seeing version 1 of the page because its cached but theres already version 2 available, i understand that hitting ctrl+f5 will make me see version2. Then i close my browser and open that page again, ¿do i see version 1 or i still see version2? Thanks.
    – molerus
    Jan 18, 2017 at 7:50
70

I've implemented cross-browser compatible page to test browser's refresh behavior (here is the source code) and get results similar to @some, but for modern browsers:

enter image description here

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  • The links on your page are broken, I fixed the link on the answer, but a lot of the links from that page are broken. podlipensky.com/examples/refreshbutton/index.html , podlipensky.com/post/2012/02/27/… Jun 19, 2012 at 23:25
  • Sorry, about that - doing blog migration. Links will be fixed ASAP, for now - please go to github repository and download examples. Jun 20, 2012 at 23:21
  • The links are still broken. Migration not finished?
    – bernardn
    Jan 29, 2015 at 11:25
  • Can you please update your answer with current version of the browsers, especially mobile and desktop Safari, @PavelPodlipensky? Aug 20, 2015 at 15:07
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At least in Firefox (v3.5), cache seems to be disabled rather than simply cleared. If there are multiple instances of the same image on a page, it will be transferred multiple times. That is also the case for img tags that are added subsequently via Ajax/JavaScript.

So in case you're wondering why the browser keeps downloading the same little icon a few hundred times on your auto-refresh Ajax site, it's because you initially loaded the page using CTRL-F5.

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IE7/8/9 seem to behave differently depending on whether the page has focus or not.

If you click on the page and CTRL+F5 then "Cache-Control: no-cache" is included in the request headers. If you click in the Location/Address bar then press CTRL+F5 it isn't.

2

When user press F5 although new request goes to web server and get a responce for the request as well. But when the responce header is Parsed it check the required information in browser cache. If the required information in cache has not expired then that information is restored from in cache itself.

When user click on CTRL-F5 even then new request goes to web server and get a responce. But this time when the responce header is Parsed it do not check any required information in cache, and bring all updated information form server only.

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