| Home | Register | FAQ | Members List | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
|
|
#1 (permalink) |
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 12,358
|
Special Characters and SEO
I've come upon a situation I've never encountered before. I have a site built around a product. Said product's name has an "i acute" - í - in it. I've created all the pages with a regular "i" because: 1) It's easier than using the character map, manually typing the character entity, or copy/pasting every time. 2) I'm afraid Google might not give í and i the same weight/value. Enlighten me. |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 (permalink) |
|
For all your goober needs
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Coventry, UK
Posts: 1,528
|
where the main market for this product? if it's somewhere in europe for example, they'd be able to type an í a lot easier than brits or yanks, and would therefore be more likely to search on this basis. I may be wrong but don't SE's just index both versions of the word by default? Time is really the only capital that any human being has, and the one thing that he can’t afford to lose. - Thomas Edison
prem ghinde |
|
|
|
#6 (permalink) |
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 2,152
|
Hi PGO, I wondered this recently when I had to use a special character for the word "Crèche".... testing google when searching for creche and crèche I got the same results, and it highlighted the è (or e) regardless of which one was searched for! Use the numbered HTML entities, much better for cross browser/platform compatibility and xhtml validation. Btw, do NOT use special characters for URLs. |
|
![]() |