hi Brady,
No - there are different pages like this
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img1
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img2
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img3
...
Welcome to the Q&A Forum
Browse the forum for helpful insights and fresh discussions about all things SEO.
hi Brady,
No - there are different pages like this
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img1
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img2
http://www......../bmw/gallery/img3
...
Thank you for the reply.
Regarding the category: Yes it has multiple blog posts and I already implemented in the correct way according to what you are saying.
Regarding the gallery: there are multiple pages of images (pagination) within the gallery. What is chaning in general is only the image but the text will remain almost the same everywhere.
This is the way i implemented the rel next / prev and canonical:
rel prev for http://............ page_image1.html
rel next for http://............ page_image3.html rel canonical for http://............ page_image2.html (the actual page).
Is that correct ? Or should i remove the rel canonical and let only the rel prev and next ?
This question camed in my mind after reading a post on searchengine land that says:
"You can use these attributes for article pagination, product lists, and any other types of pagination your site might have. The first page of the series has only a rel=”next” attribute and the last page of the series has only a rel=”prev” attribute, and all other pages have both. You can still use the rel=”canonical” attribute on all pages in conjunction." [link to the article]
Hi there,
I am running an WordPress blog and i was looking a couple of days on the source code of the categories. From a SEO point of view would make sense to include into the header of the categories the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags ?
Same question would be for the image galleries . Should i add the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags on the image galleries ? So for example if i upload 10 images to a gallery, the user will check the post and see the gallery. It will click on an image and will redirected on the attachment page of that displays that image > from where he can click next to see the next image or prev for the previous image. Therefore should i add the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags here too ?
Many thanks
Hi there,
I am running an WordPress blog and i was looking a couple of days on the source code of the categories. From a SEO point of view would make sense to include into the header of the categories the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags ?
Same question would be for the image galleries . Should i add the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags on the image galleries ? So for example if i upload 10 images to a gallery, the user will check the post and see the gallery. It will click on an image and will redirected on the attachment page of that displays that image > from where he can click next to see the next image or prev for the previous image. Therefore should i add the rel=“next” and rel=“prev” tags here too ?
Many thanks
Thank you for the reply.
Regarding the category: Yes it has multiple blog posts and I already implemented in the correct way according to what you are saying.
Regarding the gallery: there are multiple pages of images (pagination) within the gallery. What is chaning in general is only the image but the text will remain almost the same everywhere.
This is the way i implemented the rel next / prev and canonical:
rel prev for http://............ page_image1.html
rel next for http://............ page_image3.html rel canonical for http://............ page_image2.html (the actual page).
Is that correct ? Or should i remove the rel canonical and let only the rel prev and next ?
This question camed in my mind after reading a post on searchengine land that says:
"You can use these attributes for article pagination, product lists, and any other types of pagination your site might have. The first page of the series has only a rel=”next” attribute and the last page of the series has only a rel=”prev” attribute, and all other pages have both. You can still use the rel=”canonical” attribute on all pages in conjunction." [link to the article]
Looks like your connection to Moz was lost, please wait while we try to reconnect.