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I am using jQuery to dynamically add a script to my page and it works, but jQuery appends "_=TIMESTAMP" to the URL causing the browser to never use the cache. With the following code:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC '-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN' 'http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd'>
<html xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<head>
    <script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.5/jquery.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
    <script type="text/javascript">
        $("head").append('<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8.15/jquery-ui.min.js"></scr' + 'ipt>');
    </script>
</body>
</html>

I can see in firebug that the URL requested is:

https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8.15/jquery-ui.min.js?_=1313291978667

Does anyone know how to tell jQuery not to do this?

Thanks

share|improve this question
Instead of appending the script tag you can use getScript method of jquery to get js script file on the page – ShankarSangoli Aug 14 '11 at 3:28

2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

To answer your original question, you see the timestamp appended because jQuery by default sets cache: false for script and jsonp calls which appends the timestamp to the URL.

To avoid the timestamp, you can do this:

$.ajaxPrefilter(function( options, originalOptions, jqXHR ) {
  if ( options.dataType == 'script' || originalOptions.dataType == 'script' ) {
      options.cache = true;
  }
});

This sets up a global prefilter for all $.ajax calls, including the ones made by jQuery while requesting the script.

We inspect the dataType to make sure we're not inadvertantly targetting other ajax calls and explicitly set cache to true. This will avoid the timestamp appending problem.

You can now use your original code and it'll pick it up from cache.

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Excellent answer. While the other one worked for my particular case, this is a more complete answer. – Leslie Hanks Aug 14 '11 at 4:37
This helped me out, thanks. Just for the sake of completeness: that : needs to be a =. – Chips_100 Nov 30 '12 at 9:19
@Chips_100: Fixed. Thx for pointing out! :) – Mrchief Mar 25 at 19:34

You can use $.ajax to get the script instead of appending script tag

$.ajax({
  url: "http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.5/jquery.min.js",
  dataType: "script",
  cache: true,//This will decide whether to cache it or no so that it will not add the timestamp along with the request
  success: function(){}//In the success handler you can write your code which uses resources from this js file ensuring the script has loaded successfully before using it
});
share|improve this answer
1  
I think you meant true, not ture on the cache. – OverZealous Aug 14 '11 at 3:33
1  
Yes @OverZealous, edited that thanks. – ShankarSangoli Aug 14 '11 at 3:36
Your solution was exactly what I needed, but I didn't mark it as answer because I would still like to know if there is a way to fix the original problem. In this particular case, I just wanted to load the script, but what if I was loading HTML from an ajax request that used script includes? I would still want that to use the cache. – Leslie Hanks Aug 14 '11 at 3:53

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