Subversion
Written by: Lorna Jane Mitchell
Featured Refcardz: Top Refcardz:
  1. Git
  2. DNS
  3. Data Mining
  4. Spring Data
  5. Subversion
  1. Spring Data
  2. Subversion
  3. Spring Config.
  4. Spring Annotations
  5. Data Mining

Link Details

Link 926045 thumbnail
User 1038807 avatar

By sidsid
via toptechnologysolutions.blogspot.com
Submitted: Feb 18 2013 / 13:50

Browsers can cache images, JavaScript, CSS files on a user's hard drive, and it can also cache XML HTTP calls if the call is a HTTP GET. The cache is based on the URL. If it's the same URL, and it's cached on the computer, then the response is loaded from the cache, not from the server when it is requested again. Basically, the browser can cache any HTTP GET call and return cached data based on the URL. If you make an XML HTTP call as HTTP GET and the server returns some special header which informs the browser to cache the response, on future calls, the response will be immediately returned from the cache and thus saves the delay of network roundtrip and download time.
  • 2
  • 0
  • 61
  • 54

Add your comment


Html tags not supported. Reply is editable for 5 minutes. Use [code lang="java|ruby|sql|css|xml"][/code] to post code snippets.

Voters For This Link (2)



Voters Against This Link (0)