Well said! :)

In addition it would be nice if a developer could easily, manually
close the connection if for some reason needed too.

--
Brandon Aaron

On 4/18/07, Ⓙⓐⓚⓔ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It is code written by the devil to torture the good and pure of heart!
It was a kludge to a firefox version that is no longer supported. It's only
still there because it was taken as gospel by the early adopters of jQuery!
I'm not a zealot, or calling for a reform, but I can no longer support the
idea that an http connection ever needs to be forced closed.

John has previously spoken on these 2 evil lines of code, Who will be the
first to strike them from memory????

They cause nothing but trouble and mislead the innocent, jQuery is not hocus
pocus, yet those 2 lines are.

THERE, I feel better!


On 4/18/07, Jörn Zaefferer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Dan G. Switzer, II schrieb:
> > Jeff,
> >
> >
> >> Boy I feel like a dummy, but I can't even find that line in my jQuery
> >> script. I am testing with jQuery 1.1.2 unpacked. Is that what we are
> >> talking about?  I might be having a similar problem and want to test
> >> against that by commenting this out as well, but it helps if you can
> >> find it first.
> >>
> >> doh..
> >>
> >
> > Try searching for the word "connection". I think it only appears a few
> > times. The line is where base AJAX code is.
> >
> In the (almost) latest revision at line ~ 4907:
>
> if ( xml.overrideMimeType )
>         xml.setRequestHeader("Connection", "close");
>
> I'm still not sure when that is really necessary to set. Could someone
> summarize the conclusion from this thread?
>
> --
> Jörn Zaefferer
>
> http://bassistance.de
>
>



--
Ⓙⓐⓚⓔ - יעקב   ʝǡǩȩ   ᎫᎪᏦᎬ

Reply via email to