Monday, January 14, 2019

Meta Tags

Meta tags are snippets of text that describe a
page's satisfied; the meta tags don't come on
the page itself, but only in the page's code. We
all know tags from blog culture, and meta tags
are more or less the same thing,little content
caption that help advise search engines what
a web page is about.


The only difference between tags you can look
(on a blogpost, say) and tags you can’t see is
location: meta tags only continue in HTML,
usually at the “head” of the page, and so are
only visible to search generator (and people
who know where to look). The “meta” stands
for “metadata,” which is the kind of data
these tags add – data about the data on your
folio.
Meta tags are snippets of text that describe a page's satisfied; the meta tags don't come on the page itself, but only in the page's code.


The meta tags will look something like this:
meta tags


The four types we’ll discuss here are:
  • Meta Keywords Attribute - A series of keywords
  • you deem applicable
  • to the folio in question.
  • Title Tag - This is the text you'll see at the
  • effective of your browser.
  • Search appliance view this text as the
  • "title" of your page.
  • Meta Description Attribute - A brief definition
  • of the page.
  • Meta Robots Attribute - An explanation to
  • search engine crawlers
  • (automation or "bots") as to what they should
  • do with the page.

Meta Keywords Attribute

Meta Keywords are an example of a meta
tag that doesn’t make much
sensibility to use these days. Years ago,
the meta keyword tags may have been
good, but not anymore.

Title Tag

Title tags, on the other hand, are the most
big of all of the meta tags discussed here.
These tags have a real impact on search
hierarchy and, perhaps just as importantly,
are the only one of the tags we’ll discuss here
that are visible to the moderate user. You’ll
find them at the top of your portal
(for organic search pages
or for PPC landing pages):

Meta Description Attribute                                              

This is a quite useful meta tag as, very
simply, it clarify to search engines and
(sometimes) searchers oneself what
your page is about. Let’s say you were
gurgling the phrase “meta key” for example.
You potency encounter the following results:

Meta Robots Attribute

With this attribute, you're convincing the
search engines what to do with
your pages:
  • index/noindex - This tells the generator
  • in case to show
  • your page in search results or not.
follow/nofollow - This tells the generator what
to do with links on your pages: whether they
should faith and "follow" your links to the
next page or not.

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