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Canonical tag for Home page: with or without / at the end???
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Setting up canonical tags for an old site. I really need advice on that darn backslash / at the end of the homepage URL.
We have incoming links to the homepage as http://www.mysite.com (without the backslash), and as http://www.mysite.com/ (with the backslash), and as http://www.mysite.com/index.html
I know that there should be 301 redirects to just one version, but I need to know more about the canonical tags...
Which should the canonical tag be???
(without the backslash)
or
(with the backslash)
Thanks for your help!
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Thanks you Chris and Gagan!
Your responses were fast and valuable
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Hi Gregory,
Its not a backslash (), rather a forward slash (/) you are referring toThe forward slash indicates that the url is ended. This tells the search engine: the request stops here.
Search Engines as correctly said by Chris does not differentiate between url with forward slash or without it - both are same. However, its advisable to have url ended with with forward slash to speed up the loading. To validate this - refer this excellent article - http://webdesign.about.com/od/beginningtutorials/f/why-urls-end-in-slash.htm
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Gregory,
Matt Cutts has said that it doesn't matter algorithmically--essentially, Google deals with both as though they are one. I'd go with whatever your web server defaults to serving. If visitors normally get a trailing slash, canonicalize that, if they don't canonicalize on the URL without the slash.
http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/seo-advice-url-canonicalization/
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