Hi,
Do you guys how search engines like cookies? One site I'm working on now
requires the user to select which region he/she is from on the start
page. That value is stored in a cookie. So without cookies you can't get
past the start page. Does this leave the search engines at the start
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 9:29 AM, Emil Edeholt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Do you guys how search engines like cookies? One site I'm working on now
requires the user to select which region he/she is from on the start page.
That value is stored in a cookie. So without cookies you can't get
Search engines won't come past that page. How about setting a default
region when a user enters a different page then your main page?
Daniel Brown wrote:
On Mon, Apr 7, 2008 at 9:29 AM, Emil Edeholt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Do you guys how search engines like cookies? One site I'm
At 3:29 PM +0200 4/7/08, Emil Edeholt wrote:
Hi,
Do you guys how search engines like cookies? One site I'm working on
now requires the user to select which region he/she is from on the
start page. That value is stored in a cookie. So without cookies you
can't get past the start page. Does
On Wed, 28 May 2003 09:31:11 -0500, Jay Blanchard wrote:
I wouldn't go as far as using the auto_prepend_file.
Neither would I in this case Jay.It was simply an example of what
could be done, not necessarily what SHOULD be done. I did however, use
auto_prepend_file in a .htaccess file for a
I think this is very important for dynamic site
developers to understand. I'm very interested in
learning more about this and I think we could all
benefit from anyone with solid search engine
experience.
I run a site with about 18,000 news articles. They are
stored in database and dynamically
Hello,
On 05/28/2003 11:48 PM, Olinux wrote:
To make sure that google re-indexes every month. I
have thought of sending a last modified header using
year/month/day of article and a random
hour/minute/second. but if this random
hour/month/second is earlier than the one already
indexed it does not
So I would like to make a search engine for my site. Can you use PHP to
do this? Or is another language/application/whatever more appropriate??
If so, can you give me links to where I can find information on this
topic.
Thanks!!
Hello!
PS So I would like to make a search engine for my site. Can you use PHP to
PS do this? Or is another language/application/whatever more appropriate??
PS If so, can you give me links to where I can find information on this
PS topic.
http://php.net/mnogo
http://mnogosearch.org
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] PHP search engines
So I would like to make a search engine for my site. Can you use PHP
to
do this? Or is another language/application/whatever more
appropriate??
If so, can you give me links to where I can find information on this
topic.
Thanks
hi,
It depends on the data storage system you use, and the more you get deeper
with it the more you get it more customized for your own site, i mean that
when you do it with the natural PHP APIs it's better rather than obtaining a
ready-made search system, however if you want to use a
cc's trimed
On 23-Sep-2001 Heidi Belal wrote:
Hi All,
this may be a bit off topic, but i need/advise on
where and how i can register a site in the top search
engines. I know there are all these sites where you
can do it but do you have recommendations?
My other question is, why do we have
Hi All,
Does anyone have any experience with registering sites on the major search
engines? I have a number of questions I hope to find help with (and please
do excuse that not all of them are directly PHP related)
-Do search engines treat .html and .php files differently in caching etc?
-I
One of best tutorials around can be found at:
http://www.northernwebs.com/set/
rm
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Tom,
I can't be sure, since I'm not too knowledgeable with this, but I would
think this would work just fine. The search engine should be seeing the URL
just as the user would. Further, a site I know does a similar trick (though
I'm not sure they use mod_rewrite) where /users/username is
Steve,
You clearly know your stuff about search engines.
I was planning to use the header:
header("Expires: " . gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s") . " GMT");
to ensure that pages are not cached in the client.
But reading your excellent contribution, I was wondering whether a
search bot would see this
Hello,
I am new to the list and to php...I would like to know how php does with the
major search engines. Do I need to do something extra to make it work? Will
it index if I am pulling my content from text files? (If this is in an
archive somewhere, point me to it).
Thank you!
Joe
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PHP
uot;Joe Montiel" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 01, 2001 8:52 PM
Subject: [PHP] Search Engines
Hello,
I am new to the list and to php...I would like to know how php does with
the
major search engines. Do I need to do something extra to make it work?
Will
it i
"Joe Montiel" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am new to the list and to php...I would like to know how php does with
the
major search engines. Do I need to do something extra to make it work?
Will
it index if I am pulling my content from text files?
PHP produces HTML output which is sent to a
Hi everyone,
Could any one tell me what is the search engine you always use? Thank.
Calvin
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On Tue, 23 Jan 2001 13:33:00 +0100, Sander Pilon ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
If you want to be totally searchengine-safe, do not use variables
on the
url, do not rely on cookies and do not rely on POST variables
for the pages
you want to have the searchengine spider.
How the heck do you
At 09:23 23.01.2001, Kristofer Widholm said:
[snip]
If you want to be totally searchengine-safe, do not use variables on the
url, do not rely on cookies and do not rely on POST variables for the pages
you want to have the searchengine spider.
How the heck
On Tuesday 23 January 2001 09:23, Kristofer Widholm wrote:
If you want to be totally searchengine-safe, do not use variables on
the url, do not rely on cookies and do not rely on POST variables for
the pages you want to have the searchengine spider.
How the heck do you build a dynamic site
At 13.33 +0100 01-01-23, Sander Pilon poked the keyboard as follows:
If you want to be totally searchengine-safe, do not use variables on the
url, do not rely on cookies and do not rely on POST variables
for the pages
you want to have the searchengine spider.
How the heck do you
I was wondering if anyone can enlighten me about the ability of search
engines to read and list PHP pages. I have been told that because PHP
produces a dynamic html page (i.e. one that possibly outputs different HTML
for each hit or request) that they are not easily added to search engines
(if
-Original Message-
From: Sander Pilon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 22, 2001 9:51 AM
To: Jamie; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] Search Engines and PHP
I was wondering if anyone can enlighten me about the ability of search
engines to read and list PHP pages. I have been
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