to get this done I found the below code on other post.
<meta property="og:image" content="http://example.com/logo.jpg">
<meta property="og:image:type" content="image/png">
<meta property="og:image:width" content="1024">
<meta property="og:image:height" content="1024">
This works fine if I use http://example.com. But when I use www.mysite.com this is fetching another thumbnail.
Can anyone help me to get the same image when I access with www and without www as well?
It just took time. No issues with the code.
Related
I have a website that i've set up through google sites. I have a link to an external webpage. What I'd really like to have happen is, if someone clicks the link, it shows a jpg picture for about 5 seconds and then forwards them off to the linked website. Is there a way to do that?
Thanks,
Rich
Adding to following tag:
<META http-equiv="refresh" content="5;URL=http://example.com">
to the <head> section of a webpage will redirect the user to example.com, or whatever the URL value is. You can display an image in the <body> section of this page. This seems like the simplest way to accomplish what you want.
I have a problem with cut web page after enter the page in browser on Iphone 6 plus. But site is correctly look in Ipad 2 and Iphone 4 and 5. Can anyone help me with this issue? I added <meta name="viewport" content="initial-scale=1.0, width=device-width">.
Thank you for help)
ADD IN TO section when resize to refresh your page
<meta content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" name="viewport">
I am creating an application that will allow people to publish content on our website and have it simultaneously appear in their Facebook timeline. From my understanding of the OpenGraph API, I need to create a publicly available page with metadata that Facebook can access in order for the publish action to work. For example:
<head>
<meta property="fb:app_id" content="" />
<meta property="og:type" content="" />
<meta property="og:title" content="" />
<meta property="og:image" content="" />
<meta property="og:url" content="" />
<meta property="og:description" content="" />
</head>
My concern is that if this page is available to Facebook, then people who are not logged into our website will be able to see this content as well. Is this a common security concern? What best practices are recommended to make your users' content secure from unauthorized users?
It depends on what you want to share.
If you just want to share text or a photo that you've uploaded to a user's album, you can create a post or photo using the Graph API.
Otherwise, you need to restrict the visibility of shared pages with rules on your server. The shared page needs to be visible to the Facebook scraper (See this SO post for details), but require authentication for other users and search engines.
I have a question:
If I put this code in my website:
<META NAME="robot" CONTENT="noindex,nofollow">
The google won't search the specific page, right? not all website.
With NOINDEX, Google will not include any content from this page in its index (The page will be invisible to Google searches).
With NOFOLLOW, Google bot will not try and follow any link on this page, hence these pages that the current page links to will not be included in Google index, unless they can be reached (by Google bot) in other ways.
Beware that the snippet in the question uses the wrong name for this META tag. ROBOTS needs to be in its plural form, not ROBOT. While upper/lower/mixed casing doesn't matter, I do not believe the bots will try both names.
BTW, <META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOINDEX, NOFOLLOW"> is equivalent to
<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NONE">
And, yes! The rest of the web site will be indexed by Google as normally, unless of other bot exclusions.
The official word on the way Google bots interpret the META tags can be found on the Official Google WebMaster Central Blog
i have to write htaccess for mysite. actually we have two domains. '.com and .in' . for example i opened '.com' site it will actomatically access files from '.in' domain. there is no files in .com site. how to write .htaccess for this.
thanks.
If you have access to the web server, use the configuration to archieve this. In case of apache2, it would just require a server alias in the virtual host. Otherwise, use redirects or url rewriting.
If you cannot use them either (because you are on a limited virtual environment, f.e.), place an index.html in your .com directory, configure it to redirect via meta-refresh tag. Place the following line in the header section of your index.html:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0; URL=http://yourinsite.in/">
Then use the DirectoryIndex directive on a .htaccess file to automatically load it as default index page:
DirectoryIndex index.html
This brings up the index.html when the user browses yoursite.com/ and lead her to yourinsite.in automatically.
Do you have access to the server config? Judging by your comment above what you actually want is to setup a server alias, where the .com and .in sites are the same? This will make the .com site load the .in or vice versa.
Another solution you could use if you don't have server access it use a domain frame cloak, which will keep the .com URL in the address bar but load the .in site inside a frame, put this code in index.html on the .com site, fill in what toy need to.
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/frameset.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<title>TITLE OF THE SITE</title>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8">
<meta name="Description" content="Description of the site"
</head>
<frameset rows="100%,*">
<frame frameborder="0" src="http://domain.in" scrolling="auto">
<noframes>
<body>
<p><b>Welcome on our site. Your browser do not support frames.</b></p>
<p>Click here to go to the page.</p>
</body>
</noframes>
</frameset>
</html>