Uhm,
1. Its done with page cache control rather than counting the number of times
js has to hestory minus.
2. Page refreshes dont effect the history.
I realise that the future for the history navigation in web browsers is
about to bring change to cater for DHTML/AJAX/etc, but please, there are
ways to manage your page navigation and the "too hard basket" as you suggest
is not one of them.
Rgds,
Eugene.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael M Slusarz" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, February 19, 2010 10:09 AM
Subject: Re: [imp] Use of Back Button in IMP & Vanishing Left Nav
Quoting Eugene Kerner <[email protected]>:
My 2 bobs worth again ...
To my fellow developers out there: "Dont use the back button" is not a
solution.
So many websites now are breaking the back button with things like ajax,
and then rather than fixing their mistake they are sayiong saying "stuff
it the user shouldnt use the back button".
But guess what, the user will use the back button, so all you are doing
is making your site or application dodgy and unprofessional.
The biggest offender is facebook.
This is an ignorant statement. How is one supposed to fix this? There
is absolutely no way to reliably/consistently work around browser UI
design, which is inaccessible to anything we can do remotely via code.
(We tried capturing back button presses in DIMP 1.x, but it is impossible
to catch all cases so it has been removed).
What you are saying is that dynamic refreshing of page elements must not
be done, and all page interaction must be accompanied by a total refresh
of all page elements. Seems like a gigantic step backwards IMHO.
michael
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Michael Slusarz [[email protected]]
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