You can just set document.browse.refresh to 0, which disables all refresh
directives. I ran into this the other day. Things like this are typical of
too many web sites these days.
On Sat, 9 May 2015, Mayuresh wrote:
On Sat, May 09, 2015 at 05:08:47PM +0200, Fabienne Ducroquet wrote:
If you set document.cache.ignore_cache_control = 1 in the options, going
back in the history makes the page stop reloading.
Thanks. It solves the problem.
But it makes the following use case very difficult:
Typically I open links using -remote while reading mails and visit the
browser after I have finished the mails to view all accumulated tabs. Many
times these URLs are formed automatically to search a term on Google.
Worse is, if Google detects too many refreshes, it throws abnormal usage
error.
Now I have to visit each tab and press the back button as soon as I open
it.
Any further ways by which I don't have to go back to stop refreshes will
solve my problem fully.
Mayuresh.
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