But you have to consider that chances are, the person entering the article won't select all the possible keywords that could become links ahead of time, so you'd end up with articles that don't have enough links.. but I like the idea.
Personally, i think a spider/bot is the best bet, maintain a list of phrases/words that should point to links and add those in. Alternately, when a new article gets created search for all the articles that might need a reference to it and ask the user to select which ones to process (automagically add links to the new article) (avoids the time gap of a bot) On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 4:10 PM, Michael Southwell < [email protected]> wrote: > Glenn Powell wrote: > >> Ah. New article titles are based on phrases from pre-existing content. >> > > I'll bet you could pre-create most of the links every time you write an > article. I mention Valley Forge, I think "there should be an article on that > some day", and so I create the link right then. When the article is > displayed, you check to see whether the target exists; if it does, you > display the link; if it doesn't, you display the text without the link. That > could at least make things easier in the future (maybe). > > > -- > ================= > Michael Southwell > Vice President, Education > NYPHP TRAINING: http://nyphp.com/Training/Indepth > > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP User Group Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php >
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