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General ASP.NET question
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Forum:
ASP.NET
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01017844
Message ID:
01018329
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19
Einar,

There is also a setting in most browsers that determines how often it checks for a new version of a web page instead of just loading whatever is in its cache.

In IE 6, it is under Tools>Internet Options on the General Tab, in the Temporary Internet Files group box. Click the Settings button to open the Settings dialog and for "Check for newer versions of stored pages," you will want to select the option "Every visit to the page." I think that the default is "Automatically."

If you forget to change this setting, it makes HTML coding annoying because you can hit the refresh button on the browser over and over and the page is rendered the same.

David


>John,
>Because of the simplicity of this application I didn't use VS.NET to create the ASPX file(s) used notepad (mostly because I am an old school HTML programmer).
>The odd thing is that I have not run into the same problem on either of my development computers (W2K and XP Pro) or at any other client's site (about 100 installations I think). The only thing that I can think of that is different with this customer is that his computer is not connected to the internet (not even with dialup).
>Very odd.
>
>Einar
>>Hi again:
>>
>>It would be in the asp.net code in the webforms. If the page is cacheable (sp?), they would be inserted into the cache in code. There are attributes you can use to determine the refresh and expiration of cached data. You would have to look there.
>>
>>
>>
>>>John,
>>>Thank you for your reply. Where can I find this setting? Is it a "global" setting?
>>>
>>>Einar
David S. Alexander
Kettley Publishing
20271 SW Birch Street, 2nd Floor
Newport Beach, CA 92660-1752
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