I forget how I fixed it; I either had to re-open the page, or re-save my post (which when I edit it now, still displays the original URLs BTW).
*bug eyes on bit in parentheses*
That's a bit...strange. Thanks for the warning, as I use WP as my external host for most, though not all, images.
2) Would caching necessitate or imply the copy DW stores is permanently kept/doesn't expire? Asking because I'm thinking of browser caching, in which the page can be set to expire after a certain amount of time (instantly/hours/days/never) so at that point must be refreshed to retrieve the latest copy. Could it work the same way for images, in which case DW's copy would, if set to do so, just go *poof* at some point (deleted/no more copy)?
Does DW keep cache in general, I wonder? So I make a new post and edit it 25 times after posting it; does DW retain any/all prior versions (actually, I've always wanted to know this)? No biggie if you don't know, just wondering.
As to 2), I wonder if there are any tools that could help from the client side to find out. The name of one's just slipping my mind but lets you look deep behind the scenes (not Web Inspector, it's like...grinding my gears here but can't think of its name. But it's an all-caps acronym with just four letters).
no subject
Date: 2019-09-06 03:22 am (UTC)From:*bug eyes on bit in parentheses*
That's a bit...strange. Thanks for the warning, as I use WP as my external host for most, though not all, images.
2) Would caching necessitate or imply the copy DW stores is permanently kept/doesn't expire? Asking because I'm thinking of browser caching, in which the page can be set to expire after a certain amount of time (instantly/hours/days/never) so at that point must be refreshed to retrieve the latest copy. Could it work the same way for images, in which case DW's copy would, if set to do so, just go *poof* at some point (deleted/no more copy)?
Does DW keep cache in general, I wonder? So I make a new post and edit it 25 times after posting it; does DW retain any/all prior versions (actually, I've always wanted to know this)? No biggie if you don't know, just wondering.
As to 2), I wonder if there are any tools that could help from the client side to find out. The name of one's just slipping my mind but lets you look deep behind the scenes (not Web Inspector, it's like...grinding my gears here but can't think of its name. But it's an all-caps acronym with just four letters).