Search engines would still be indexing the original page's title. I
need each unique URL to have its own unique, robot friendly title.
Again, this question is strictly within WP context.
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 6:49 PM, Bastien wrote:
>
>
> Bastien Koert
>
> On 2012-02-13, at 5:34 PM, Haluk Kar
Bastien Koert
On 2012-02-13, at 5:34 PM, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> Yeah, but n the context of wordpress, that does not fly.
> If I do a die; in the middle of wp's tinymce editor, and check back
> the page, the title is already out there.
>
> first 5 lines would be something like
>
>
>
>
>
Yeah, but n the context of wordpress, that does not fly.
If I do a die; in the middle of wp's tinymce editor, and check back
the page, the title is already out there.
first 5 lines would be something like
the wordpress page title we were trying toi change is already
here...
http://gmpg.org/x
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 17:15, Haluk Karamete wrote:
Please keep the replies on the list for all to benefit, including
the archives.
> Isn't it TinyMCE considered a WYSIWYG one? but, anyway, that's beside
> the main point.
Indeed. Hence:
" even web-based things like TinyMC
On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 15:50, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> you may find it weird, actually very weird, but is the following possible>
>
> load up a post or page into the admin panel and place something like
> this in to the editor;
>
>
> //assume exec-PHP already active
>
> $current_page_url_here = g
Based on the terms you're using it sounds like this is a Wordpress
question. You'd have a lot better chances of getting an answer if you
query a group of WP gurus/geeks.
Marc
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
6 matches
Mail list logo