I would like to know when the article in Google will change if I changed the path to it from http://mysite.com/my_article to http://mysite.com/my-article
Closed due to the fact that it is necessary to reformulate the question so that you can give an objectively correct answer to the party Nicolas Chabanovsky ♦ Jan 8 '17 at 8:51 .
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1 answer
- Need to have a sitemap
- Need to have a Google Webmaster Tool Account
- In order for Google to immediately scan for sitemap, you need to launch the “See as Googlebot” tool in the control panel. ps I think after that he will change the path to the article
- It will not change - it will begin to see that the new content has the same content, and may simply block 2 pages. (404 search engine doesn’t like it either - Makar
- but if the old page no longer exists, after he has read the sitemap, then he will no longer index it, then he should not block it, and then go know how to actually try - Paulo Berezini
- Each page has its own time for reindexing, depending on the site. On average - 2 weeks for small sites. So the robot will think that he has 2 identical pages. The weight of the new will not be - the old will definitely not take the place of the old one (if it takes) and will issue 404, which is very bad, because the page used to be, but now it doesn’t, and where it went is unknown, because the only moving indicator is the redirect. - Makar
- then maybe it makes sense to use a redirect of duplicates via .htaccess - Paulo Berezini
- it makes sense, as I wrote in my reply. This is one of the iron rules - moved page - 301/302, depending on the situation - Makar
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