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Direct Links Vs. Cgi Form Redirects.
#1
Posted 18 November 2005 - 04:00 PM
Example:
FORM - select your state: (Menu of 50 states)
vs.
href - Alabama
href - Alaska
etc.
(I did not want to make actual go-nowhere hyperlinks, but you get the idea.)
I am considering the addition of state hyperlinks to the bottom of the main page as an alternative to using the CGI redirect form. I have this state hyperlink format in the site map, but the site map is not being picked up by the bots, so far. I have seen the FAQ and article links, but not the site map. I may need to move that link up to the top where the others I just mentioned (Articles and FAQ) are listed.
Thanks,
Pete
#2
Posted 18 November 2005 - 04:10 PM
#3
Posted 18 November 2005 - 04:55 PM
Thanks Jill,
Pete
P.S. I just noticed, I moved up to an HR3! (Is that a good thing, or do I just ask too many stupid questions?)
#4
Posted 18 November 2005 - 05:59 PM
Both?
#5
Posted 18 November 2005 - 10:08 PM
O.M.G. - She got me to use smilies.
#7
Posted 19 November 2005 - 09:57 AM
Cool link.
-Dan
#8
Posted 19 November 2005 - 12:03 PM
Visitors view it as a styled form dropdown list. Search engine spiders eat up those links. That much I can assure you.
#9
Posted 19 November 2005 - 12:34 PM
The site has a minimum number of menu items and it does not quite get them all displayed in a browser on IE 5. It does better on IE 6 and FireFox. It requires two Javascripts in addition to the CSS scripts. I would need to find out how much more scripting would be required to get a menu like that to scroll (You just cannot get 50 states on a menu. The problem gets worse when you get into states like California that require hundreds of cities to be included. This is a great solution for a site that has fewer menu selections, but I cannot see a way I could make good use of it. I think I would be better off just adding the 50 direct hyperlinks to the bottom of the page.
I certainly appreciated the reply and the link. As I stated, I think that concept is a great idea for smaller menus and I would never have even known it existed, if it were not for your post. (Over 6-months ago, I asked about redirect options just like this one on two other forums. No answers like this ever surfaced.)
Thanks,
Pete
#10
Posted 19 November 2005 - 12:45 PM
#11
Posted 19 November 2005 - 01:25 PM
One thing I was impressed with is that when I turned my Javascripting off, the menu still worked. I know the menu requires the script, because if you remove the script, it won't open. I ned to find out if certain scripts will work, even if Javascripting is disabled.
I will check a couple of programming sites that have some experienced Javascript programmers and see what they think. Maybe, if I can come up with something, I can post a link here to help anyone else who has a similar long-menu element.
#12
Posted 19 November 2005 - 03:25 PM
First, IE5 is archaic. I wouldn't spend too much time worrying about that one unless your site stats indicates you have a significant portion of your users still using IE5. It just means they haven't upgraded anything in 2 years or so. Same goes with NN4.x as far as I'm concerned.
Also, if the idea is to get the SE's to see those links browser versions we humans use have no bearing. The links just need to be visible in the source code sans Javascript. Engine bots never see the actual dropdown box, so they're still going to see all of the links.
If you have a longer list, I'm 100% sure it could be created in such way that all of the links could be seen in any fairly modern browser. IE5 had severe box model issues, but you could code around those. NN4.x didn't support much CSS, so that one is a moot point.
#13
Posted 19 November 2005 - 07:02 PM
#14
Posted 19 November 2005 - 09:06 PM
The few times I have seen the noscript message, well, it simple states that your browser does not support Javascript or you need to turn Javascripting on to access a feature. The tags, however, are just begin and end execution markers, so, although I have never tried it, it seems reasonable that HTML code could be placed in between the tags.
Cool idea, Jill
Pete
P.S. I am not so sure about the scrolling suckerfish menus. I have contacted three programming sites, had 30 views collectively, and so far, no one has reported seeing such a script. I need to give it a couple more days to see if something turns up, but after reading about 50 posts about suckerfish menus, I would estimate about half the people who use them have expressed difficulty with them, especially with cross-browser reliability.
#15
Posted 19 November 2005 - 10:49 PM
Those are by people without a clue.
Go to my home page at www.highrankings.com and view the source. I use it there because my javascript menu is not spiderable.
Simple as pie.
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