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by zbuttram
280 days ago
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I almost used this recently to gain more control over the HTTP cache behavior in our app at work, but eventually realized what I wanted could be achieved by combining plain old cache headers with some more intelligent cache busting query strings. I would definitely like to see some more real-life examples where this API provides unique benefits over traditional cache handling. |
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It's very powerful, which also makes it a footgun: you can end up with fetch() requests going out over the network, with server responses saying one thing, but the frontend receiving something completely differently.
As for examples, I believe Home Assistant uses it to cache pretty much every resource in the frontend pre-emptively so you can use the web UI even if your internet connection is down (but your connection to your home server isn't).