This likely won’t be relevant to a lot of devs here, because the remember plugin does the job fine in most cases, but:

Here’s a normal text input (id is not needed for this example, but is almost always needed so adding it here):

<input id="thingyInput">

And here’s one which remembers what you type into it even after page refresh:

<input id="thingyInput" oninput="localStorage.thingy=this.value" value="[localStorage.thingy || '']">

Of course, the remember-plugin can do this for you, but I often find myself reaching for the above pattern for its simplicity.

localStorage is what the remember-plugin uses behind the scenes - whatever you store in it will be persisted even after page refresh. It’s a built-in browser/JavaScript feature - not something that’s specific to Perchance.

The || '' in [localStorage.thingy || ''] means or ''. In other words, it means or output nothing. If you want a default value for when the user loads the page for the first time, you could write [localStorage.thingy || 'blah'] which means “use whatever is in localStorage.thingy if it exists, otherwise use ‘blah’”

  • @perchanceOPM
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    11 month ago

    is localStorage “safe”? Does it only store for that specific generator (like, localStorage’s behavior is overridden for that), or can it pick things up and change things from other generators?

    Yep, it’s safe. Each generator gets their own subdomain, and browsers partition storage based on subdomain/origin, so one generator cannot read the localStorage of another generator. If you want to do that, then you need to control both generators, and you’d need to embed one within the other, and use postMessage

    • @wthit56
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      11 month ago

      Thank you 👍

      Yeah, it’s just not easy to figure out that actually generators are running in their own subdomain–once someone explained that, I could see how it worked 😁