TITLE>Web Page Title</TITLE> <META content="index, follow,all" name=robots> <META NAME="KEYWORDS" CONTENT="web Keywords.." /> <META NAME="DESCRIPTION" CONTENT="Description" /> <meta http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-9"> <meta content=mircbook.net name=copyright> <meta name="robots" content="INDEX, FOLLOW" /> <meta name="Revisit-After" Content="1 Days" /> <meta name="category" CONTENT="ALL" /> <meta name="googlebot" CONTENT="index, follow"> <meta name="rating" CONTENT="all" /> <meta name="FORMATTER" CONTENT="web page" /> <meta name="DISTRIBUTION" CONTENT="Global" /> <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="tr"> <meta name="classification" content="Keyword"> <meta name="contactOrganization" content="webpage" /> <meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="yes" /> <meta http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="yes" /> <meta name="author" content="Nokta"> PHP: I hope you will benefit
All those meta tags for the robots, dont you just do that in the robots.txt file? Also, if you are posting something like this, why not describe a little about it, I can see some basic stuff in there, but alot of people would be jsut as dumbfounded as I am right now as to what the purpose of it is.
<meta name="robots" content="INDEX, FOLLOW" /> <meta name="Revisit-After" Content="1 Days" /> <meta name="category" CONTENT="ALL" /> <meta name="googlebot" CONTENT="index, follow">
Again, what is the purpose of this? I'm curious. As in, why wouldnt we just use a robots.txt file for all of this, like Google supports