Last edited by ArchMed1; 19 September 2021 at 09:39 PM. Reason: adding
No, the hyphens are not generated automatically. If you leave spaces in your folder/filenames you will end up with 'mars%20attacks%20paris'.
In this instance, the forward slash / denotes a sub folder and they ARE automatically added. You would name your folders space-wars and mars-attacks-paris. The URL would be space-wars/mars-attacks-paris
Play around yourself with a small test site, it's the best way to learn.
No it doesn't and why would you need it to show a long url? The page url is shown in the browsers url window which is often not full browser width depending on the viewers personal settings.Thank you, Egg. Pull up any news magazine and select any articles to read and the URL looks just like how I showed it. It's aesthetics for the faux of a professional news magazine. I would post some magazine examples but they are not mine and I would not want to violate any rules of the forum.
In the attachment below I give three examples of the near usefullness of creating meaningful url's as opposed to Acorns method of using an article number.
If you think it helps in your SEO ranking this is of very little importance either.
Egg
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@Egg - here are three professional magazines of the type I am emulating with this website. A faux university archaeological journal. You find they all use the method I am using for the URLs. But keep in mind, I have created a shortened text from the Header 1 fields in the article for the subfolder to keep it smaller on the URL but consistent with the nature of the article.
I did not believe it had anything to do with SEO - it's all about the aesthetics of a reader visiting the site - relaying it is an actual professional journal website.
I agree it would be easier to use the original method of using Articles/A26, Articles/A22, etc., but it's about the presentation, and when I visit any other site, this would glare out at me in an instant. So does a home page or article page that has "index" as the page's title. Some will noticed it right away.
Last edited by ArchMed1; 19 September 2021 at 10:53 PM. Reason: details
Yes Arch you supply examples but what is the worth/value of such url's?
Egg
Minis Forum UM780XTX AMD Ryzen7 7840HS with AMD Radeon 780M Graphics + 32 GB Ram + MSI Optix Mag321 Curv monitor + 1Tb SSD + 232 GB SSD + 250 GB SSD portable drive + ISP = BT + Web Hosting = TSO Host
As I mentioned, "it's all about the aesthetics of a reader visiting the site - relaying it is an actual professional journal website."
It has nothing to do with the mechanics of the website - just the appearance of the site as an actual, professional scientific journal. It's just frosting for appearance.
Yes you supplied the url's but you don't explain their value.
As I pointed out often the browser url window is not full width, so long url's are meaningless, so where does 'the aesthetics of a reader visiting the site' come into play if it's not visible in it's entirety?
So my example of the BBC website page using https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/58616727 as a url is unprofessional, really?I agree it would be easier to use the original method of using Articles/A26, Articles/A22, etc., but it's about the presentation, and when I visit any other site, this would glare out at me in an instant.
Indeed that's why the page can have a page filename as well as a page title:So does a home page or article page that has "index" as the page's title. Some will noticed it right away.
Egg
Minis Forum UM780XTX AMD Ryzen7 7840HS with AMD Radeon 780M Graphics + 32 GB Ram + MSI Optix Mag321 Curv monitor + 1Tb SSD + 232 GB SSD + 250 GB SSD portable drive + ISP = BT + Web Hosting = TSO Host
I cannot explain it any better. The magazines I am emulating use this URL method and their naming of the folders which I am not going to do. I'm shortening my article Header 1 article titles to name the subfolders so it makes the names smaller so they fit the URL entirely. It's just appearance and the look of the entire page, like having all T's and I's crossed for this type of publication, Egg.
Like these American news publications:
https://nypost.com/2021/09/19/gabby-...rida-cops-say/
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/u...-home-n1279537
If the BBC wants to do it their way, fine, the US drinks beer cold and the UK drinks theirs warm, except for lager, am I right?
But thanks for the Webproperties thumbnail. I can definitely use this.
You're missing my point entirely Arch. Why use long url's? The two examples above do not completely fit into my browser's url window, they are cut off. They will be cut down in length dependant on the visitors browser, browser setting and the number of plug-ins they have installed etc etc etc. You have no control over this.
Even more so the browser tabs content which shows either:
orUs closdependant on the number of tabs I have open.US closes part of Tex
So if the complete url isn't shown in the browser nor in the page tab what is your fixation with long url's. They don't even render full length within Google searchs. They have little influence on SEO.
I don't understand this statement at all.I'm shortening my article Header 1 article titles to name the subfolders so it makes the names smaller so they fit the URL entirely.
Egg
Minis Forum UM780XTX AMD Ryzen7 7840HS with AMD Radeon 780M Graphics + 32 GB Ram + MSI Optix Mag321 Curv monitor + 1Tb SSD + 232 GB SSD + 250 GB SSD portable drive + ISP = BT + Web Hosting = TSO Host
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