Background I want to access the cache of Chrome and Firefox in my Cocoa application. I need to get the HTML for pages accessed recently. Safari is a piece of cake - all this information is available in SQLite data stores, but not so in Chrome and Firefox. The Problem For Firefox, the cache is in /Library/Caches/Firefox/Profiles/xxx.default/Cache with filenames CACHE001 CACHE002 CACHE003 and CACHEMAP For Chrome, the cache is in /Library/Caches/Google/Chrome/Default/Cache with filenames data0 data1 data2 and data3 What I've tried The only article I can fin. I'm trying to align the navigation to the banner below on the website I'm creating here: / I've been able to make it so it aligns in Chrome and Safari on my mac, and in IE, but it is still misaligned on Firefox or any PC using Chrome or Firefox.
![Firefox Firefox](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125634302/680096973.jpg)
This is making my head turn. Any suggestions? I have a padding the determines with width of the navigation here: #nv-tabs a padding:0 33px 0 34px; text-decoration:none; cursor: pointer; /. IE 7 bug-fix./ color:#FFFFFF!important; display:block; background:none; line-height: 29px. STEPS TO REPRODUCE THE PROBLEM: Step 1: Let´s say you have cleaned up your cache history on your browser (firefox). / Step 2: You type www.stackoverflow.com on your browser to could get some new data on your cache folder. Step 3: you type on your browser 'cache:about' Step 4: you click on 'Disk cache device/List cache entries' Step 5: I search for some '.png' file that has been downloaded to my cache folder.
Here’s a handy guide on how to delete cookies on Mac. Removing cookies is naturally directly connected to the browser you use. To make it easier, we'll go over each and show you how to clean up cookies from the three most popular browsers: Firefox, Safari, and Chrome.
And taking notice that the data size is actually 16425bytes. Step 6: Copy the path where the image has been stored on your computer. / Step 7: I take a fast look how the image looks l. In my web application, I send all the usual response headers to the browser to prevent caching (Cache-Control: no-store, no-cache). Content expiration is also turned on. However, if I log out of my application in Firefox 3.6 and then navigate to 'about:cache', I can see HTML content from inside my application in the memory cache. I've also tried a couple banking/credit card sites and saw the same issue.
Is there a way to prevent Firefox from caching content not only on disk but in memory so that someone else can't come along and examine the memory cache later? I can always ask my users to close the browser after logging out by there's no way to g. Background I want to access the cache of Chrome and Firefox in my Cocoa application. I need to get the HTML for pages accessed recently. Safari is a piece of cake - all this information is available in SQLite data stores, but not so in Chrome and Firefox. The Problem For Firefox, the cache is in /Library/Caches/Firefox/Profiles/xxx.default/Cache with filenames CACHE001 CACHE002 CACHE003 and CACHEMAP For Chrome, the cache is in /Library/Caches/Google/Chrome/Default/Cache with filenames data0 data1 data2 and data3 What I've tried The only article I can fin.
Share on Facebook Tweet this Share When it comes to browser history and privacy, most people would rather peruse the Web incognito than use a platform that tracks their every move. However, your browser cache can be helpful as well as harmful, temporarily storing website components such as images, scripts, and other page snapshots for quicker viewing whenever you revisit the same site down the line. It’s a convenient way of reducing bandwidth and perceived lag, along with load times, but it’s also a computing mechanism that can leave you in the stone age in terms of up-to-date viewing. Therefore, nearly every browser features quick-hit tools for clearing the cache — if you can find them, that is. Doing so may not be completely necessary, nor need to be done often.
However, there are several reasons clearing your browser’s cache can prove fruitful. First off, purging the stored data in your cache automatically forces your browser to seek and retrieve the most recent webpage elements instead of recycling the same old components, whether they’re up-to-date with the developer’s standards or not.
Furthermore, resetting your cache will potentially help in the event of 404, 502, and other errors that may potentially result from a corrupt cache, and clear any private data you have stored in the form of login IDs, passwords, and other sensitive information you’d rather not store on your machine. It’s also a simple trick you can employ to shed any unnecessary data, which could slow down your browser. That said, below is our guide to doing so, no matter which browser you use.
Google Chrome Step 1: Open the settings — Launch Google Chrome, click the Chrome menu icon represented by three horizontal bars in the upper-right corner of the browser window, and click Settings near the bottom of the resulting drop-down menu.