But we should give it a try, no?
The spec are still Working Drafts.
All the best, Ashok

On 11/15/2011 2:47 PM, Adam Barth wrote:
These APIs are quite widely used on the web.  It seems unlikely that
we'll be able to delete either of them in favor of a single facility.

Adam


On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 2:05 PM, Noah Mendelsohn<n...@arcanedomain.com>  wrote:
This is a comment from the W3C Technical Architecture Group on the last call
working draft: "Web Storage" [1].

The HTML5 Application Cache (AppCache) [2] and Local Storage [1] both
provide client-side storage that can be used by Web Applications. Although
the interfaces are different (AppCache has an HTML interface while Local
Storage has a JavaScript API), and they do seem to have been designed with
different use cases in mind, they provide somewhat related facilities: both
cause persistent storage for an application to be created, accessed and
managed locally at the client. If, for example, the keys in Local Storage
were interpreted as URIs then Local Storage could be used to store manifest
files and Web Applications could be written to look transparently for
manifest files in either the AppCache or in Local Storage. One might also
envision common facilities for querying the size of or releasing all of the
local storage for a given application.

At the Offline Web Applications Workshop on Nov 5, 2011 [3] there was a
request for a JavaScript API for AppCache and talk about coordinating
AppCache and Local Storage.

The TAG believes it is important to consider more carefully the potential
advantages of providing a single facility to cover the use cases, of perhaps
modularizing the architecture so that some parts are shared, or if separate
facilities are indeed the best design, providing common data access and
manipulation APIs. If further careful analysis suggests that no such
integration is practical, then, at a minimum, each specification should
discuss how it is positioned with respect to the other.

Noah Mendelsohn
For the: W3C Technical Architecture Group

[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/2011/WD-webstorage-20111025/
[2] http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/offline.html#appcache
[3] http://www.w3.org/2011/web-apps-ws/



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