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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/development/caching.md')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/development/caching.md | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/development/caching.md b/doc/development/caching.md index 58ec7a77591..9b3f9a4215e 100644 --- a/doc/development/caching.md +++ b/doc/development/caching.md @@ -22,11 +22,11 @@ A faster store for data, which is: ## What is fast? -The goal for every web page should be to return in under 100ms: +The goal for every web page should be to return in under 100 ms: - This is achievable, but you need caching on a modern application. - Larger responses take longer to build, and caching becomes critical to maintaining a constant speed. -- Cache reads are typically sub-1ms. There is very little that this doesn't improve. +- Cache reads are typically sub-1 ms. There is very little that this doesn't improve. - It's no good only being fast on subsequent page loads, as the initial experience is important too, so this isn't a complete solution. - User-specific data makes this challenging, and presents the biggest challenge @@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ Use conditional GET caching when the entire response is cacheable: - Users and API libraries can ignore the cache. - Sometimes Chrome does weird things with caches. -- You will forget it exists in development mode and get angry when your changes aren't appearing. +- You forget it exists in development mode and get angry when your changes aren't appearing. - In theory using conditional GET caching makes sense everywhere, but in practice it can sometimes cause odd issues. |