1. META tags always go in between the HEAD tags on your website.
2. NEVER include any line breaks in any META tag!
Most everyone knows the two basic META tags: keywords and description.
Keywords should be in a descending order of importance.
Descriptions should also be kept short and to the point.
Meta tags are textual elements that you employ to educate search engines and visitors to your site about your page and the information it includes. The following are examples of meta tags:
Title tags: your page's title, which should be different for each page you publish.
Meta description: a summary of the page's content.
The viewport tag affects the appearance of your content on mobile devices.
Robots: can be used to specify material that should be "noindex" or "nofollow."
When you have an international audience, you may use hreflang tags to tell the search engine what language and country you want your content to be displayed in.
Canonical tags are used to denote the page's primary or principle version.
When sharing links on social media platforms, open graph tags are used to designate which assets appear in the title and picture by default.
The content type of your page has an impact on how it is rendered in the browser.
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