To associate a temporary cookie value with the current document, simply set the cookie property to a string of the form:
name=value
A cookie written as described above will last for the current web browsing session, but will be lost when the user exits the browser. To create a cookie that can last across browser sessions, include an expiration date. You can do this by setting the cookie property to a string of the form:
name=value; expires=date
Similarly, you can set the path, domain, and secure fields of a cookie by appending strings of the following form to the cookie value before that value is written to the document.cookie property:
; path=path ; domain=domain ; secure
To change the value of a cookie, set its value again, using the same name (and the same path and domain, if any) and the new value. To delete a cookie, set it again using the same name, an arbitrary value, and an expiration date that has already passed. Note that the browser is not required to immediately delete expired cookies. In practice, with Netscape, cookie deletion seems to work more effectively if the expiration date is in the relatively distant (several hours or more) past.
file: /Techref/language/JAVA/SCRIPT/definitive/ch15_03.htm, 5KB, , updated: 2019/10/14 15:00, local time: 2024/11/19 15:24,
3.145.12.5:LOG IN
|
©2024 These pages are served without commercial sponsorship. (No popup ads, etc...).Bandwidth abuse increases hosting cost forcing sponsorship or shutdown. This server aggressively defends against automated copying for any reason including offline viewing, duplication, etc... Please respect this requirement and DO NOT RIP THIS SITE. Questions? <A HREF="http://linistepper.com/Techref/language/JAVA/SCRIPT/definitive/ch15_03.htm"> [Chapter 15] 15.3 Storing Cookies</A> |
Did you find what you needed? |