No problem. Let us know if you have any more questions.
-Ross
On Mar 8, 2010, at 2:09 PM, Martin Dale Lyness wrote:
> Again, thank you so much for the help! The head merge feature is perfect for
> this situation i described and my next line of though is right inline with
> how you describe bin
Again, thank you so much for the help! The head merge feature is perfect for
this situation i described and my next line of though is right inline with
how you describe bind points!
Thanks again!
-- Martin
On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 12:47 PM, Ross Mellgren wrote:
> For your particular example, you
For your particular example, you can use head merge as Naftoli suggests. Head
merge is a behavior of Lift templates where any tags will be merged
together for the final output, so you put your meta name="description" in each
of the specific places, any general head stuff you want in your surrou
It's not necessary. Just put a head section in the template and it will be
combined with the head section in default.html.
-
Martin Dale Lyness wrote:
Thank you Ross, for the very informative response!
Now, I consider SEO to be closer to a designer task than
Thank you Ross, for the very informative response!
Now, I consider SEO to be closer to a designer task than a developer task so
keeping the power in the design documents would be my best idea. Is there
anyway to allow individual pages to define blocks that are read into the
snippets and then injec
To be parsed by the bind, it must be enclosed by
...
There is relatively little magic -- Lift goes through your template looking for
lift: prefixed tags. For those tags, it will look up a snippet class by using
the part before the period (HelloWorld, in the above example) and then look for
a m
How would one go about having dynamic description and keyword meta
tags in a template? Here is what i've tried:
default.html
HelloWorld.scala
Helpers.bind("b", in, "time" -> date.map(d => Text(d.toString)),
"meta_desc" -> "test desc")
I'm using a basic archetype build of 2.0-M3 and it produces