- From: Bronislav Klučka <Bronislav.Klucka@bauglir.com>
- Date: Fri, 16 Sep 2011 14:21:58 +0200
On 15.9.2011 21:23, Ashley Sheridan wrote: > However, if the text in your header is the same on every page (i.e. a > site header) then it might not make sense as an<h1>. As far as SEO > goes, I would aim to make the<h1> unique per page on the site (which > I'm guilty of not doing on my own site!) and only use one per page. That > said, there's no hard and fast rule, so maybe play about over a period > of a couple of months (nothing is fast about SEO is it?!) and see which > method gives you better results? HTML5 does allow you to have as many H1 as you want (assuming of course there is a meaning to it), sectioning elements create new scope for hX elements <section id="mainContent"> <h1>BLOG LISTING</h1> <article> <h1>My views on HTML5</h1> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <aside> <h1>HTML history</h1> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> </aside> </article> <article> <h1>My views on CSS3</h1> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> <p>lorem ipsum</p> </article> </section> Is perfectly valid markup. Not only valid, but semantically correct. The other question is to what level do current ranking search engines understand this ability. WHATWG hardly has the answer for that, it would be better to ask on search provider forum how this affects SEO. Bronislav Klu?ka
Received on Friday, 16 September 2011 05:21:58 UTC