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Posted by dorayme on 08/10/07 00:08
In article
<1186701285.623400.226420@e16g2000pri.googlegroups.com>,
alice <alice@fearofdolls.com> wrote:
>
> >
> > It's not possible, at least not unless you do it deliberately by writing
> > a cookie or tracking connections on the server. Neither are things you
> > could very feasibly do by accident.
>
> This is what I thought, thanks for being able to answer it, and not
> just saying I'm lame for not providing the code or URL.
>
> >
> > There must be some other explanation.
> >
> > If the second person saw black then red, but the first time they visited
> > the page was after it had been changed to red,
>
> The whole reason that this troubled me, is that it was never -changed-
> to red, it always was red. There never could have been a black version
> to be cached in any way shape or form. This is why I'm wondering if
> anyone else has experienced this.
It is not hard to get puzzles with links when you have complex
style sheets. There are all sorts of tricky issues that can throw
one. There are default style sheets that operate. In other words,
apart from cache, a browser takes all the css into account and
resolves according to the cascading rules. These are not
intuitively simple in practice. A url is very important in this
and there is nothing lame about the call for it.
--
dorayme
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