Hello Greg,
I too was a little concerned that Rich and Patrick might think I was getting a
little too far off-topic. :)
At any rate, it seems that I may have been worrying about nothing.
You see, a while back I installed Automatic’s “AMP” plugin, but then I forgot
about it.
I just researched
Bill,
Rather than continue to hijack the topic, I’m responding privately.
The easy way is to install JetPack (which you should be using anyway), and then
avail yourself of the “custom CSS” capability. Then you can define and use
custom classes, and apply these via divs or spans.
I don’t know,
Greg, I am glad you brought up that point regarding WordPresss, because this is
something I have been wondering about since last night.
As you already know, AMP specifications outright prohibit certain standard HTML
tags -- such as the font tag — and inline styling in HTML document bodies.
Thus
What I mean is that if your pages are generated by WordPress (for example),
then it's marginally easier to insert all the special AMP coding. When the
pages are generated programmatically, then each page should be pretty much
the same for any given template, so you can sample-validate a few page
On Feb 22, 2017, at 1:58 AM, Fletcher Sandbeck wrote:
> The trick is to figure out what the problems are and then apply those fixes
> to all your pages using BBEdit's multi-file search/replace. However, finding
> the errors is easier than fixing them.
Exactly. I have massively used BBEdit’s m
> On Feb 22, 2017, at 1:40 AM, Fletcher Sandbeck wrote:
>
> I've worked on converting some large sites to AMP and it has been good for
> the HTML quality on the sites. My sites are generally dynamic, but contain
> user submitted articles and comments so it's been a two step process.
> Ensurin
On Feb 22, 2017, at 1:00 AM, Greg Raven wrote:
> AMP seems better suited to programmatically-generated web pages, not manually
> maintained static pages. The main problem I have with AMP for static pages is
> that there is no way to validate AMP code ... each page will generate a bunch
> of er
The trick is to figure out what the problems are and then apply those fixes to
all your pages using BBEdit's multi-file search/replace. However, finding the
errors is easier than fixing them.
This pattern "\s*. If this same nested pair occurs a lot then
you can search/replace it. There probabl
I've worked on converting some large sites to AMP and it has been good for the
HTML quality on the sites. My sites are generally dynamic, but contain user
submitted articles and comments so it's been a two step process. Ensuring that
the template and navigation of the site is AMP-friendly. And t
AMP seems better suited to programmatically-generated web pages, not
manually maintained static pages. The main problem I have with AMP for
static pages is that there is no way to validate AMP code ... each page
will generate a bunch of errors due to AMP's non-standard HTML. Some of my
static s
If the only issue standing between you and a simple search-and-replace is
the varying spaces from page to page, create a TextFactory that Optimizes
your entire site (HTML pages, that is), and then perform the
search-and-replace. Afterward, you can use a TextFactory to Format each of
your HTML p
One way to avoid a lot of the clutter is by converting your website over
to the AMP — Accelerate Mobile Pages — standard, which is what I recently did
with my primary website.
It was a lot of work — and very challenging and frustrating at times due to my
own lack of knowledge — but I believe I
That is a problem with all WYSIWYG editors. If you don't get it right first
time, you get silly situations like those nested tags and nested
divs.
There are two ways to tackle this. Manually: using BBEdit's syntax checker
to find errors in the markup and fixing them individually. Automaticall
I still have some code created buy Adobe GoLive editing. There seems to
have been a flaw that caused duplicate vids and extra spaces so the pages
have become almost impossible to edit. Here is an example:
-
"One of the greatest discoveries a man makes, one of his
great surprises, is to fin
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