Is there any way to prevent URL showing when I am printing a webpage?
Actually all tag shows URL which is much annoying to some client. And my client asked me to avoid URL when printing a page. But I didn't found any solution yet. Tried couple of method already. No result.
Anyone can give me some suggestion is there any way to prevent URL actually?
Related
Using Nuxt, we need to be able to render pseudo-routes, like this:
https://server.com/non-existent-route
Where "non-existent-route" is a dynamic path.
Normally, this would render error.vue. This is fine, as we've subverting the use of this page to render what we want. But... we just discovered that Nuxt is sending a 404 anyway! This only happens when the page is first loaded in a fresh tab, for some reason. This is very bad.
So, we need a way to avoid HTTP status 404 in some cases.
We found this:
https://medium.com/finn-no/hacking-nuxts-404-logic-for-maximum-awesome-and-easy-proxying-e4efaeb03d66
which is actually not as helpful as we had hoped it would be, as it simply provides a way to proxy another URL, sending us back to the same problem.
We suspect there might be some middleware solution to this problem... but have not been able to come up with it.
Turns out the answer was right here all long:
https://nuxtjs.org/guide/routing#dynamic-nested-routes
Rather disappointing that nobody suggested this extremely simple solution.
I am receiving 404 errors (showing on Google search console)that somehow relate to Facebook.
eg http://www.beerandcroissants.com/staying-in-mykonos-myconian-k-hotel/room-at-myconian-k-hotel-mykonos/%22https:/www.facebook.com/pages/Beer-and-croissants/1423705111261254
What it seems to be doing is taking one link (eg part of the whole link above) which relates to a photo on my blog and then appending the facebook page url. So, if I take the first part of the link above
(before the facebook part starts) I get a perfectly good link through to my site. If I take the second part (where the facebook link starts) then it takes me to my FB page. Again fine.
Why are these two linking together like this as it is this that seems to be causing the 404. Is it something in my settings. It's only just started happening.
Going to facebook directly and clicking on my post links takes me to the correct part of my blog.
I am not sure how to fix this. There are no broken links attached in google for me to view either. They keep happening every day. I now have 295 crawl errors and growing.
Would appreciate any help that can be given to lead me in the right direction.
I've had this as a suggestion....but don't know where to look for this code....
I'd say it may be coming from the following code on :staying-in-mykonos-myconian-k-hotel/room-at-myconian-k-hotel-mykonos/
It's also likely this is carried through the entire site.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Beer-and-croissants/1423705111261254">
Note the " in the URL before https://www.facebook
I suggest you go through your code looking for similar issues.
Could someone please assist me if they are able.
Greatly appreciated.
thanks
Kerri
I'm currently working on a wordpress site. My task is just to add the conversion script in a thankyou page. I added the script here: http://www.livingedge.co.nz/thanks-for-getting-in-touch/ , unfortunately does not work. It says that a conversion.js was not found.
See the attached screenshot: http://screencast.com/t/52ixQUzHKNxZ
I added the conversion script on the footer put it in a conditional so that it will load only on the thakyoupage.
I'm new to this and can't figure out what would be the possible cause of such problem.
I tried adding the script in the header, on the page editor, on a form redirect.
Q: What could be the possible cause of this issue?
The URL you are using for the conversion script is incorrect — the correct one has "www" in the domain name.
The fact that you've got this link wrong makes me think you may be looking at incorrect directions.
Follow the instructions given in the Google documentation page "Setting up conversion tracking" precisely.
First off, I saw similar posts already, but they weren't exactly what I am asking.
I used the Facebook Dev to create a like button for my website, stuck the code in and the the button showed up. The only issue is that it likes the wrong url when I click the button.
I'm pretty sure the issue is that I have it set to redirect automatically from mydomain.com to the most recent post. I think this is gumming up the works with the like button and causing it to like mydomain.com/mostrecentpost instead of simply liking mydomain.com.
Is there a way to correct this issue without having to get rid of the redirect (because that isn't an option)?
Sorry if that was a little wordy, wanted to make sure I explained the issue fully.
Is there a way to correct this issue without having to get rid of the redirect (because that isn't an option)?
Either don’t redirect in those cases where the user agent header of the request points to it being Facebook’s scraper;
or set the canonical URL of http://example.com/mostrecentpost to just http://example.com/ using the appropriate Open Graph meta tag. (Although that would mean you would not be able to like a single post any more, because all of your posts would just point to your base domain as the “real” website; so the first is probably the better option.)
I wonder if there is a way to make the Facebook crawler ignore the canonical link on a page.
I have a situation where the canonical link points to a different URL than the one that you are actually on.
This results in that the og:image, og:url etc. that is dynamically added to the page is ignored and the information on the facebook page is completely wrong.
I have searched for an answers to this but come up short...
If I have understood your comments correctly, you may be going about this the wrong way. If you want your like button to like a url different to the page you are on, just change the href of the like button. Make sure the page at that href has the correct og tags and you shouldn't have a problem.
If this isn't what you mean, can you try to explain what you are trying to achieve, rather than what you think the problem is, as you might just be approaching it from the wrong angle.