- Cookies are included with every HTTP request, thereby slowing down your web application by transmitting the same data.
- Cookies are included with every HTTP request, thereby sending data unencrypted over the internet.
- Cookies are limited to about 4 KB of data . Not enough to store required data.
The two storages are session storage and local storage and they would be used to handle different situations.
The latest versions of pretty much every browser supports HTML5 Storage including Internet Explorer.
Session Storage:
The Session Storage is designed for scenarios where the user is carrying out a single transaction, but could be carrying out multiple transactions in different windows at the same time.
Example:
For example, if a user buying plane tickets in two different windows, using the same site. If the site used cookies to keep track of which ticket the user was buying, then as the user clicked from page to page in both windows, the ticket currently being purchased would "leak" from one window to the other, potentially causing the user to buy two tickets for the same flight without really noticing.
HTML5 introduces the sessionStorage attribute which would be used by the sites to add data to the session storage, and it will be accessible to any page from the same site opened in that window ie session and as soon as you close the window, session would be lost.
Following is the code which would set a session variable and access that variable:
DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
if( sessionStorage.hits ){
sessionStorage.hits = Number(sessionStorage.hits) +1;
}else{
sessionStorage.hits = 1;
}
document.write("Total Hits :" + sessionStorage.hits );
script>
<p>Refresh the page to increase number of hits.p>
<p>Close the window and open it again and check the result.p>
body>
html>
Local Storage:
The Local Storage is designed for storage that spans multiple windows, and lasts beyond the current session. In particular, Web applications may wish to store megabytes of user data, such as entire user-authored documents or a user's mailbox, on the client side for performance reasons.
Again, cookies do not handle this case well, because they are transmitted with every request.
Example:
HTML5 introduces the localStorage attribute which would be used to access a page's local storage area without no time limit and this local storage will be available whenever you would use that page.
Following is the code which would set a local storage variable and access that variable every time this page is accessed, even next time when you open the window:
DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
if( localStorage.hits ){
localStorage.hits = Number(localStorage.hits) +1;
}else{
localStorage.hits = 1;
}
document.write("Total Hits :" + localStorage.hits );
script>
<p>Refresh the page to increase number of hits.p>
<p>Close the window and open it again and check the result.p>
body>
html>
Delete Web Storage:
Storing sensitive data on local machine could be dangerous and could leave a security hole.
The Session Storage Data would be deleted by the browsers immediately after the session gets terminated.
To clear a local storage setting you would need to call localStorage.remove('key'); where 'key' is the key of the value you want to remove. If you want to clear all settings, you need to call localStorage.clear() method.
Following is the code which would clear complete local storage:
DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<body>
<script type="text/javascript">
localStorage.clear();
// Reset number of hits.
if( localStorage.hits ){
localStorage.hits = Number(localStorage.hits) +1;
}else{
localStorage.hits = 1;
}
document.write("Total Hits :" + localStorage.hits );
script>
<p>Refreshing the page would not to increase hit counter.p>
<p>Close the window and open it again and check the result.p>
body>
html>
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