This is the proper way to construct an image reference in XHTML, and what aspects of this help in Google’s image search.
Every standards-compliant, Google-sensitive image reference should contain 5 key items:
A src attribute specifying the URL of the image
A width declaration in which the width of the image is specified in pixels
A height declaration in which the height of the image is specified in pixels
An alt attribute that describes the content of the image—this is the #1 element of image-oriented SEO
A title attribute that contains text to be displayed when the user hovers his/her mouse over the image
Chris BrownThis is the proper way to construct an image reference in XHTML, and what aspects of this help in Google’s image search.
Every standards-compliant, Google-sensitive image reference should contain 5 key items:
A src attribute specifying the URL of the image
A width declaration in which the width of the image is specified in pixels
A height declaration in which the height of the image is specified in pixels
An alt attribute that describes the content of the image—this is the #1 element of image-oriented SEO
A title attribute that contains text to be displayed when the user hovers his/her mouse over the image
Chris Brown
I don’t know if this image indexing is related to the indexing of Google or of any other search engines. It takes time for a search engine to index newly uploaded web pages because the indexing mechanisms are the crawlers or spiders. It takes time for a web page to be indexed but it will be indexed sooner or later. For the search list I guess you need to tag your images with a good keyword or keywords.I don’t know if this image indexing is related to the indexing of Google or of any other search engines. It takes time for a search engine to index newly uploaded web pages because the indexing mechanisms are the crawlers or spiders. It takes time for a web page to be indexed but it will be indexed sooner or later. For the search list I guess you need to tag your images with a good keyword or keywords.
ChrisBrownSEO
Every standards-compliant, Google-sensitive image reference should contain 5 key items:
A src attribute specifying the URL of the image
A width declaration in which the width of the image is specified in pixels
A height declaration in which the height of the image is specified in pixels
An alt attribute that describes the content of the image—this is the #1 element of image-oriented SEO
A title attribute that contains text to be displayed when the user hovers his/her mouse over the image
Chris Brown This is the proper way to construct an image reference in XHTML, and what aspects of this help in Google’s image search. Every standards-compliant, Google-sensitive image reference should contain 5 key items: A src attribute specifying the URL of the image A width declaration in which the width of the image is specified in pixels A height declaration in which the height of the image is specified in pixels An alt attribute that describes the content of the image—this is the #1 element of image-oriented SEO A title attribute that contains text to be displayed when the user hovers his/her mouse over the image Chris Brown
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