There appears to be plenty of discussion in newsgroups on how to do caching
but nothing on why
I'm in some disagreement with one of my colleagues over the use of caching
of webpages.
He states that " I really do not expect to have to click my refresh button
on modern day sites. Years ago when amateur web building was all the rage it
was quite common to have to refresh."
and
" I do not think that our member societies should have the inconvenience of
remembering to refresh the site every time just in case they have missed
something. "
The pages change as required about once a month or less frequently. They are
not 'active' pages.
I dispute his arguments. I cannot see the point of reloading pages which are
unlikely to have changed in the course of the month. It seems to me that in
this case it is the responsibility of the person reading the pages to set
their own caching policy inside their browser.
I would welcome some discussion/reasons for and against caching.
Jo
but nothing on why
I'm in some disagreement with one of my colleagues over the use of caching
of webpages.
He states that " I really do not expect to have to click my refresh button
on modern day sites. Years ago when amateur web building was all the rage it
was quite common to have to refresh."
and
" I do not think that our member societies should have the inconvenience of
remembering to refresh the site every time just in case they have missed
something. "
The pages change as required about once a month or less frequently. They are
not 'active' pages.
I dispute his arguments. I cannot see the point of reloading pages which are
unlikely to have changed in the course of the month. It seems to me that in
this case it is the responsibility of the person reading the pages to set
their own caching policy inside their browser.
I would welcome some discussion/reasons for and against caching.
Jo
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