I always thought the underscore was considered to be a space in a file name by SEs. Like This_Sucks would be seen as This Sucks. But when doing a search on google for _ it comes up with results. Does that mean its not ignored. On the flip if you search for - it comes up with nothing so does that denote a space now? I am just curious. Thanks.
Is an _ still considered a space by google?
Collapse
X
-
Of course the Spider is decoding for natural language in URL strings, and resolving for the individual words. It is also, however, operating on a "string match" basis, where any such occasions in the index will be offered in results.tada! -
So basically it can count for both a character and a space. I am just double checking I am still safe using underscores for file names.Originally posted by 2HousePlagueOf course the Spider is decoding for natural language in URL strings, and resolving for the individual words. It is also, however, operating on a "string match" basis, where any such occasions in the index will be offered in results.Comment
-
That presumes there is a dilutive effect when both the component words and the string are indexed for a page. I have never encountered any such effect. However, when the words are part_of_a_sentence, for example, the URL can be seen to convey meaning unto the page, beyond the literal words it contains.
For example, if I named a file a_plague_o_both_your_Houses.html, I wouldn't have to tell the spider this page has something to do with Shakespeare --
tada!Comment
-
I have heard SEOs say both, I've been using dashes. I've got no evidence one is better than the other.
In fact (though I'm sure this isn't "better"), search for WordsRanTogether, and it matches spaced out versions.. it's getting more advanced254342256Comment
-
Comment
-
I really don't know, but I assume SE count is as a space because, for example, coming from google images I get alot of hits for Raven Riley, even though the image is named Raven_Riley_thumb.jpg
Oh, and wordpress generates post titles with - & all those-pages-look-like-this, and those get indexed fine.Comment
-
So in other words it doesn't matter one way or the other if you have a _ or a -.Originally posted by 2HousePlagueThat presumes there is a dilutive effect when both the component words and the string are indexed for a page. I have never encountered any such effect. However, when the words are part_of_a_sentence, for example, the URL can be seen to convey meaning unto the page, beyond the literal words it contains.
For example, if I named a file a_plague_o_both_your_Houses.html, I wouldn't have to tell the spider this page has something to do with Shakespeare --
Comment
-
-
Thanks good read.Originally posted by QuickdrawComment

Comment