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At espn score 50-40 on auto refresh page, navigate to dif page at espn hit back button score is now 15-12 when score actually increased to 60-55?

  • 2 ответа
  • 1 имеет эту проблему
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  • Последний ответ от synche

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I navigate to espn.go.com. Go to the NBA page, where they have scores of games going on that they refresh, so you get a pretty current score that is regularly updated. Say the score for the Kings game is 50-40. I click on standings to see the NBA standings. When I click the back button, I get to a earlier version of the NBA page where the score is 15-12, possibly the first version that loaded. I can understand how the back button might better take you back to where the score was 50-40, than the updated 60-55 page (see original question if this doesn't make sense), although I personally would prefer the most updated page, but why reload an old, from when you navigated away, page? Sorry if the explanation wasn't worded the greatest, but I think you get the gist.

I navigate to espn.go.com. Go to the NBA page, where they have scores of games going on that they refresh, so you get a pretty current score that is regularly updated. Say the score for the Kings game is 50-40. I click on standings to see the NBA standings. When I click the back button, I get to a earlier version of the NBA page where the score is 15-12, possibly the first version that loaded. I can understand how the back button might better take you back to where the score was 50-40, than the updated 60-55 page (see original question if this doesn't make sense), although I personally would prefer the most updated page, but why reload an old, from when you navigated away, page? Sorry if the explanation wasn't worded the greatest, but I think you get the gist.

Все ответы (2)

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Refresh rate is determined by the actual site itself or variables such as your connection & unless you know how or manually tampered with your refresh browser rate has nothing to do with the actual browser itself, rather something on the OS side slowing it down.

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I'm sorry if I don't understand your response. Maybe you didn't understand my original question. I think I may be able to express my question better, or maybe I'm just dense, but let me give it another try.

I go to a webpage, it updates itself. I navigate to another page on the website. I hit the back button. This doesn't take me back to the page I was on when I navigated away, but to a previous version, that has already been updated.

I just don't see how this way that mozilla handles a back button is useful to users. I see it as a flaw in the way mozilla handles hitting the back button, but that may just be me.