parse this file with php (use an apache directive for that)
and add the filename. Then you can get the filename from the url and interprete it inside the php file "pictures".
Its funny what you can do with php, and nobody will notice, not even the spiders.
Merlin
Octavian Rasnita wrote:
Yes Google index the entire url including the HTTP_QUERY_STRING (the part after the question mark). You will see many warnings in old tutorials telling that the search enginnes don't index the entire url, but I don't think it is the case anymore.
However, if you want to avoid this, or to just create URLS more simple to remember, use the Apache module mod_rewrite.
This way, you can let the server automaticly trranslate an url like http://www.site.com/program/var1/var2/var3 in a URl like http://www.site.com/program?v1=var1&v2=var2&v3=var3 ...or any other translations.
The first link will be easier to remember and the search engines will see it as a static web page.
The search engines won't submit any form, so they are not parsed at all. Use common links if you want them to be indexed.
Teddy
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jason FB" <jasonfb@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <php-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, December 14, 2004 8:04 PM
Subject: Google search indexing
Follow up question:
At 4:39 PM +0000 12/14/04, Richard Davey wrote:
sp> does anybody know how does google (and other search engines) index websites sp> implemented in PHP + MySQL? For instance, sites which use PHP based CMS sp> (Content Management Systems)?
It doesn't. It indexes the HTML that they output. As far as Google is concerned you could have a thousand trained monkies typing like mad for your CMS, it still only cares about the output - the HTML.
sp> Someone told us google spiders do call for the pages so they only see
the
sp> resulting HTML code. Is that right?
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