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Posted by Fufi on 10/06/33 11:27
what an a perfect response!
very thanx
This is so strange that Major Search Engines ignores Keywords,
and I belive you, by knowing pople confirms your answer about.
I am surprised on that the M.S.E. use this method...
The result is that the Page Makers put Keywords in the title tag
and this is not logic and not a stuff regarding a computer sane mentum
environ.
I don't know if they have future...
thanx again
"Benjamin Niemann" <pink@odahoda.de> wrote in message
news:dgv1hh$q5c$1@online.de...
> Fufi wrote:
>
> > Difference between:
> >
> > <META content="News, news, ..." name=KEYWORDS>
> >
> > and
> >
> > <META name="KEYWORDS" content="News, news, ...">
> >
> > You can note that the Content and the name are the same,
> > but in the first case the name KEWORDS is without Quotes,
> > and is after the content.
> >
> > What is the difference?
>
> There is no difference - neither the order of attributes nor the omitted
> quotes for the name attribute matter (in this case).
> Usually you have to quote the attribute value - the quotes can only be
> omitted in some special cases like here (only letters).
>
> > what that means for Search Engines?
>
> Nothing at all - and for some major engines even less than that, because
> they ignore the 'keywords' meta element completely.
>
> > And, if means something, what is better?
>
> Even if there is no difference, many people (and the HTML spec) consider
it
> good practice to always use quotes - at least you don't have to remember
> which characters are allowed in the attribute value when you omit the
> quotes.
>
> --
> Benjamin Niemann
> Email: pink at odahoda dot de
> WWW: http://www.odahoda.de/
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