Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Hierdie gesprek is in die argief. Vra asseblief 'n nuwe vraag as jy hulp nodig het.

PAGE INFO WINDOW DISPLAY

  • 4 antwoorde
  • 6 hierdie probleem
  • 1 view
  • Laaste antwoord deur Arnaud

more options

There are two methods to reach the info I'm having trouble with.

   *  At the top of the Firefox window On the menu bar, click on the Tools menu then select Page Info.
   * Right-click an image on a page, click 'view image info.'

Under the 'general' tab you see a line marked 'modified' with a day and a time. My problem is that I'm getting the exact date and time on a variety of images from all sorts of pages. Is it safe to assume that these dates and times mean nothing, or is there a bug in the system?

There are two methods to reach the info I'm having trouble with. * At the top of the Firefox window On the menu bar, click on the Tools menu then select Page Info. * Right-click an image on a page, click 'view image info.' Under the 'general' tab you see a line marked 'modified' with a day and a time. My problem is that I'm getting the exact date and time on a variety of images from all sorts of pages. Is it safe to assume that these dates and times mean nothing, or is there a bug in the system?

All Replies (4)

more options

These days many pages are generates on web servers via a server side script (ASP, php etc) and in such cases the date and time will be the current date and time.
Only pages that are stored on a server will show an useful last modified date.

more options

OK cor-el, no offense, but that reply provides nothing in the way of help or a solution. Maybe you should read my post a bit more carefully.

more options

I don't know whether you will like this response any better...but this is my understanding.

A web server sends a number of headers prior to sending a page or image. These include such things as the content type, so the browser knows how to display it. The server optionally can send a Last-Modified header, but often does not do so. When it does not do so, Firefox displays the time it was modified in Firefox's own cache, rather than the time it was last modified on the server. So the data is not "meaningless", but it doesn't answer the question I think you want answered.

more options

I think The_Gov expected to have an equivalent date to filemtime in PHP.