In the first installment of a new web series, Google’s Martin Splitt explains how the search engine indexes JavaScript sites. Splitt’s new web series is dedicated to SEO and JavaScript and is ...
Google renders all HTML pages for search indexing. Rendering is resource-intensive but necessary for comprehensive indexing. JavaScript-heavy websites are now fully processed by Google. Google renders ...
John Mueller of Google posted a detailed update on how Google currently handles JavaScript sites (including AJAX) and Progressive Web Apps in their index, crawling, and ranking. He posted this on ...
Google has updated the mobile-friendly test and the rich results test tools to support JavaScript sites better. Google posted on Twitter that you now will see rendered HTML, console log, exceptions ...
As part of the JavaScript SEO series Google is publishing, the first video is super basic and describes how Google indexes JavaScript sites. In short, they first crawl and index the page as is and ...
As JavaScript becomes ever more integrated with HTML on the Web, SEOs need to develop an understanding of how to make JavaScript sites search-friendly. We covered some basic approaches to SEO for ...
Nowadays, even regular Web surfers know some of the things to avoid when designing a Web site for fast performance: Cut the number of requests to the Web server. Shrink JPEG sizes. Employ a content ...
Client-side JavaScript is great for making innovative and user-friendly web sites. Next to AJAX, a web technology well established to trigger the load of certain page content on demand, so-called ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results