It's probably in content.php or functions.php which are located in the theme folder of your wordpress installation and are probably only accessible via ftp.
![spencerhjustice spencerhjustice](/community/q/assets/uploads/profile/64798-profileavatar-1619582340916.png)
Best posts made by spencerhjustice
-
RE: Do Structured Data Errors Hurt Your Rankings
-
RE: Does Title Tag location in a page's source code matter?
I'm not sure that I agree with this. If this were about the
or any element that is actually visibile on the page then I'd be inclined to agree but there is really no reason that you should need to put the <title>tag higher up as long as it is within the <head> section. It really shouldn't affect anything in my opinion.</p></title>
-
RE: Do Structured Data Errors Hurt Your Rankings
Ok, this should fix your problem. Just add the "updated" that is bolded below. That portion of the code will look like this:
%3$s
/**
- Prints HTML with meta information for the current post-date/time and author.
- @since Twenty Ten 1.0
*/
function twentyten_posted_on() {
printf( ( 'Posted on %2$s by %3$s', 'twentyten' ),
'meta-prep meta-prep-author',
sprintf( '%3$s',
get_permalink(),
esc_attr( get_the_time() ),
get_the_date()
),
sprintf( '%3$s',
get_author_posts_url( get_the_author_meta( 'ID' ) ),
sprintf( esc_attr( 'View all posts by %s', 'twentyten' ), get_the_author() ),
get_the_author()
)
);
}
endif;
-
RE: Does Title Tag location in a page's source code matter?
I mean I'm not saying that it's not possible, but above the fold is relevant to the user because it's actually something they see. The section is completely invisible to a user, hence shouldn't be relevant.
-
RE: Do Structured Data Errors Hurt Your Rankings
Yeah, I actually just noticed that I had this issue as well. You just need to add "updated" as a class so the html for the date on your http://www.kempruge.com/suv-driving-tips/ blog should end up as:
June 19, 2014
-
RE: Can Title Tag be seen in the page source, but not seen by search engines?
So I copied your source code into an html file on a locally hosted server and ran it through screaming frog. It read it with no issues.
Since your script and css files are using relative references it crawled them as 404's but it read the title, description and everything else without issues. This leads me to believe that one of your javascript files is causing an issue with the crawler.
If you have the pro version of screaming frog you can adjust the settings to ignore javascript and see if that works, which may help you solve the problem.
-
RE: Keywords Ranking Varies When Search changes Location/City (Not Google Places)
My first guess would be that they have a lot of spammy backlinks with the term Sydney in them. It's really hard to give good advice based on generalized information, but that's something that I would look into. I would look at their backlinks and anchor text with majestic seo and ahrefs.
-
RE: Keywords going to Subdomain instead of targeted page(general landing page)
Firstly, I believe that you are mixing up the terms subdomain and subdirectory. A subdomain would be occasional-tables.example.com and a subdirectory would be example.com/occasional-tables, which I believe is what you mean.
There are a lot of reasons why Google could be sending it to a page other than the one you're attempting to rank for but it's really hard to tell without seeing the actual page.
-
RE: How to add dropdown menus in the Wordpress Cutline theme?
As far as I can tell Cutline's css doesn't include support for dropdown menus. Does Cutline's main menu use the wordpress menu editor under appearance > menu in the main dashboard?
-
RE: How to add dropdown menus in the Wordpress Cutline theme?
It doesn't look the theme has been updated since 2011, so I don't imagine that it will be updated again, but a child theme would be best practice.
Samuel,
If it is using wordpress's built in menu editor I rewrote the css from the twentytwelve theme's menu to work with Cutline's theme. You should just be able to add this to the main css file. I don't think the theme will ever be updated again so I don't think that this will cause an issue.
/* Dropdown Menu */
ul#nav li {
position: relative;
}
ul#nav li ul {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
position: absolute;
top: 100%;
z-index: 1;
height: 1px;
width: 1px;
overflow: hidden;
clip: rect(1px, 1px, 1px, 1px);
}
ul#nav li ul ul {
top: 0;
left: 100%;
}
ul#nav li:hover > ul,
ul#nav li:focus > ul,
ul#nav .focus > ul {
border-left: 0;
clip: inherit;
overflow: inherit;
height: inherit;
width: inherit;
}
ul#nav li ul li a {
background: #FFFFFF;
border-bottom: 1px solid #ededed;
display: block;
line-height: 2.181818182;
padding: 8px 10px;
padding: 0.571428571rem 0.714285714rem;
width: 180px;
width: 7rem;
white-space: normal;
}
ul#nav li ul li a:hover,
ul#nav li ul li a:focus {
background: #e3e3e3;
color: #444;
}
ul#nav .current-menu-item > a,
ul#nav .current-menu-ancestor > a,
ul#nav .current_page_item > a,
ul#nav .current_page_ancestor > a {
color: #636363;
font-weight: bold;
}
ul#nav li ul li a {
padding: 5px;
margin: initial;
margin-top: 0px;
}
ul#nav li ul li {
padding: 0px 0 0 0;
text-align: left;
} -
RE: How to add dropdown menus in the Wordpress Cutline theme?
Ah, yeah then their isn't really anyway for you to get dropdown menus unless someone modifies your header.php to add them. My css would only have worked if cutline was using wordpress's built in menu function.
-
RE: How do you 301 redirect URLs with a hashbang (#!) format? We just lost a ton of pagerank because we thought javascript redirect was the only way! But other sites have been able to do this – examples and details inside
I would like to point out that twitter is using javascript redirects not serverside redirects. If you disable javascript and try that url it will load the homepage/ your twitter feed and the url will stay the same.
The second url doesn't seem to be properly redirecting as at least for me it just 301 redirects back to itself.
-
RE: Duplicate
It definitely shouldn't be harmful but is most likely unnecessary. This is the code to verify your website in Google Webmaster Tools. It looks like it's verified for two different accounts. You should only need to verify on one and then you can add users from the dashboard inside webmaster tools, instead of having multiple verification codes.