CSS - Css Not Caching In Ie?
Hello, I seem to have a problem whereby IE6 isn't caching images called from my external CSS file/s at http://www.dragonflyoffice.co.uk/.
In FF, if you visit the site and go elsewhere or close the browser before returning to the site, the page loads instantly but IE seems to download pages and images each time. I'm afraid this is hampering the expeience for users without high speed connections. Does anyone else know about this? I've trawled the web and found nothing Similar TutorialsHi, we've been having a problem since about the start of this year, and i was wondering if someone could help us? When we make changes to our styles sheets they appear to be cached, and the changes dont appear for sometime, clearing the cache of either IE or FF doesnt seem to help, ctrl-f5 doesnt seem to help. A few things that can sometimes help are navigating to the stylesheet itself, press ctrl-f5 then navigating back to the site, but that does not always fix the issue. Also switching between a firefox and ie tab in firefox with the IEtab extension sometimes helps. We are have 3 dedicated servers 1 internal, 2 external, all 3 servers have had the same problem. We have spent several years developing sites on 2 of those servers without problems. No other types of files seem to cache but style sheets are the only files we reguarly change (one of the benefits of moving away from table layouts ). Any help will be greatly appreicated. Does anyone know if when a browser loads a stylesheet, it loads all linked images into the cache - even if they are hidden from view initially? Or do browsers in general wait until the image is required to download it? I'm intrigued because I'm using :hover to do a background image swap. Cheers I am working on a site, http://callagy.netdbs.com It seems when ever I open a page, make a change, it works just fine insofar as the change is made. BUT, if I make a change to the style sheet (style.css), the change is not effective in the site until I save it as something else,then change the ref. to it in a given page. I then need to go back and save the css file back to style.css so I can see the chagne site wide. Tom I'm writing an application that uses stylesheets to display certain items. The user can alter the positioning etc. of these items (which then rewrites the stylesheet for future use), and then reloads the page. Unfortunately the old coordinates are still apllied to the elements in question until I manually hit the browser's reload button, then the new values are used. I'm guessing the style is being cached somewhere? If so can anyone advise how to stop this? thanks p.s. Its just a basic refresh that sorts it out, not a *hard* refresh. ================== I've come up with a fix of sorts. If I write the style out dynamically within the div itself each time then my problem is solved. Can you cache external css files (to make pages that use the same css file load faster)? If so, how? BTW, here is how I currently load my css (from zen garden): Code: <STYLE type=text/css media=all>@import url(/main.css); i have <meta http-equiv="cache-control" content="no-cache" /> in my head, but i DO want people to cache my .css file because that means less loading time for them. HOWEVER, only if it is not new. is that possible? In what order are CSS/html files loaded? Concurrently? What about browser rendering? Must all CSS be loaded before any html is rendered? Also aside from serverside compression / css whitespace (file) compression, removing redundant classes, and using relative paths, is there any other ways to speed loading of CSS? Would it be of benefit splitting my css file into smaller chunk files - would they all load concurrently and therefore faster? Does anyone have a good solution for forcing the cache of css files, but not the html calling the css? Thanks in advance! Ross Whenever I roll out a new feature (including new layout) to the production version of a website I am working on, I know that it won't properly work until a user downloads a new version of the relevant CSS files. For new users this happens automatically, but existing users have to wait or hit refresh. The result is that the pages look bad for some users when I make changes. I would fix this problem by renaming the CSS files whenever I make changes, but this can get a bit unwieldy since I use SVN for source code management. I would have to make a revision to other source code files solely to reflect a change in the CSS file. Another idea is to control the name of the CSS file from a constant or from my database, but each has its downsides (complexity, performance in the case of the db calls). Is there any easy way to have caching of CSS files, but somehow break through that cache when I make changes? I am guessing not since the cache is based on expiration settings set by Apache, which to be meaningful need to be long. But if you have encountered this issue before, I'd love to hear what you did! |