in reply to RE: Re: practical aspects of sessions and state
in thread practical aspects of sessions and state
As for why some people "hate cookies (or advise not to use them)", I can give you my take on that. Cookies used for long-term authentication presume the demonstratably false statement of "one user is one browser", as opposed to session cookies, which I actually consider OK unless it breaks something like in d_i_r_t_y's case.
In a given day, I'm popping back and forth between three or four browsers, and some of the browsers I use are on other people's machines, especially in internet cafes and such. So if you're crazy enough to use cookies for auth:
Because of that last point, you've got to provide a mangled URL or hidden field solution anyway. So the easiest way out is to go ahead and presume "no cookies", and then slowly add in to the design a way of having longer term recognition, as long as you stay within the guidelines above.
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
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RE: On using cookies for session management...
by sutch (Curate) on Oct 17, 2000 at 18:37 UTC | |
by merlyn (Sage) on Oct 17, 2000 at 18:43 UTC | |
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RE: On using cookies for session management...
by turnstep (Parson) on Oct 17, 2000 at 18:53 UTC |