Le 26/05/2014 01:52, Michael Heuberger a écrit :
Serving different content based on different URLs (and status)
actually does make a lot of sense when you want your user to see the
proper content within the first HTTP round-trip (which saves
bandwidth). If you always serve generic content and
David, you have very good points here. See below:
...
Yeah of course I could do that too. It is psychologically proven that
the subjective waiting time is shorter when you see something as
soon as
possible.
Yes and what I'm suggesting is providing actual content as soon as
possible. The
Yeah, something like that Austin.
But like I mentioned, why add the status code inside the HTML code when
it's already available in the HTTP status header? Hence I raised
redundancy multiple times before.
I could do that but not thanks. I still believe that JavaScript should
be able to parse the
I like the `window.http` idea mentioned earlier by Michael. Something like:
```js
window.http = {
url: window.location.href,
status: 404,
headers: {
/* ... */
}
};
```
If implemented, this would also be easy to polyfill in older browsers using
the duplicate AJAX request hack that
Exactly :)
Thanks James!
On 27/05/14 14:06, James Greene wrote:
I like the `window.http` idea mentioned earlier by Michael. Something like:
```js
window.http = {
url: window.location.href,
status: 404,
headers: {
/* ... */
}
};
```
If implemented, this would also be easy
On Sat, 24 May 2014, Emanuel Allen wrote:
SVG API for the canvas element, simple call svg; var ctx =
canvas.getContext(svg);
How would this work? Can you elaborate?
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http://ln.hixie.ch/ U+263A/,