- From: Ashley Sheridan <ash@ashleysheridan.co.uk>
- Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2010 14:43:26 +0000
On Fri, 2010-03-19 at 15:43 +0100, Roger H?gensen wrote: > On 2010-03-19 15:17, Ashley Sheridan wrote: > > Search engines and people are not the only content parsers. Sure, you > > would expect a parser to maybe look further into the content if the > > description meta tag was missing, but imagine if a parser had to do > > this for all the content it looked at? There are still overheads to > > consider. > > > > Why not just use server-side code to output the first paragraph of > > content as the description for the page also? > > > > I just feel that the <head> and <body> areas of a page have two > > distinct uses, and unnecessary crossovers shouldn't occur if it's > > avoidable. > > True, but there is also such a thing as uneeded redundancy, sure > repeating the same info in the meta tags which is also in the document > may not add that many KB, > but with increasing number of page requesters that really pile up the > bandwidth total. Something both users and hosters and ISPs should have > an interest in right? > If you look at my other thread Re: [whatwg] <meta name="description" > href="#desc" /> > It allows notifying the parser that the content is in the page, and it > is up to the parsers configuration whether to scan beyond the header in > that case. Best of both worlds IMO. > > Roger. > I did see that, and it looks like a great idea, as it shouldn't really break anything, and I saw that it should be possible to use for the keywords too, which would fit perfectly with tag cloud systems used on a page. I would presume that this would cause the content parser (browser) to strip any and all tags surrounding the marked content? Thanks, Ash http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20100319/70a78973/attachment.htm>
Received on Friday, 19 March 2010 07:43:26 UTC