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58

Eschew obfuscation. I would not be opposed to an outright ban on obfuscated and shortened URLs. If one is entered into a question, answer, or comment, the system should simply reject the post with a link to the FAQ. There's no reason to shorten a URL that doesn't need to be typed out, and some people do care about the destination of a URL before clicking ...


42

We slap slugs onto links in places where we're looking for hard numbers about usage. Click through rates, visitors per share, that sort of thing. It's a decidedly low tech approach that has a couple of benefits. No slow down we're just querying our server logs for data, clients aren't executing anything special It's reliable nothing's really running, ...


36

They're not banned. We just hate them. We really, really hate them. Persistent use of short URLs in your posts is a good way to get the attention of editors and moderators. And not the good sort of attention.


20

If you have the rep to do so, rewrite those links out into the actual. Unless the problem comes from some quirk with colons, other punctuation marks or something else like too many characters to escape for. Though the encoding continues to be improved on the links, so even that argument is falling away. The problem with URL shorteners is that if the ...


19

Yes! I understand that no one wants to read the full link http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/86997/what-can-i-do-when-getting-sorry-we-are-no-longer-accepting-questions-from-this/86998#86998, but actually http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/86998 works fine as well (abusing the short-link feature for questions which also works for answers, though it's not ...


19

One nice side-effect: we all get to see how often the thing was used. Just add the plus-character after the URL, just like with bit.ly: http://goo.gl/C1Kwu+ (But it seems one needs to be logged in to some Google account to see that.) Until March 19 2012: 11,020 clicks since May 11 2011, oddly enough only 9,318 without any referrer. Hence: at least 1/5th of ...


18

The following is officially supported and redirects to the full URL (using a 302 Found): meta.stackoverflow.com/q/23834 Also, despite the /q for /question: if this happens to be an answer ID, it redirects properly too. But I am not sure if that is official too? Like: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/75352 ...redirects to ...


18

Stack Overflow uses one table to hold both questions and answers. The ID is the primary key in the table called Posts. The ID is incremented each time a question or answer is posted. So, yes, the ID and ID+1 for two posts would likely point to two entirely different questions. You can read about the database schema in Understanding the Stack Overflow ...


16

If you are going to ask a question on a Stack Exchange site, you need to enter the text of the question. You cannot enter a link to another question asked on another site. The reason is the same for which an answer that is just a link to another site is not an answer: What would happen if the linked page is not temporary available because problems with ...


16

I've been exploring since yesterday in response to this comment and have found the following so far: ?as - A link to a different Stack Exchange network site from the all sites section of the Multi Collider. ?hq - A link to a question from the hot questions section of the Multi Collider. ?cb - A link from the community bulletin of a site. ?newsletter - A ...


15

I have no idea what this plugin is and far as I can tell it is not endorsed by us in any way. I don't know who's behind research.microsoft.com and why this plugin specifically addresses MSDN (well, that's sort of obvious) and Stack Exchange but not other sites. That said, my advice would be to edit these links out whenever you find them. They are just noise ...


15

Yeah! When it comes to the internet, one of my fears is reliance on technologies that can't sustain themselves. URL shorteners can't sustain themselves by themself. By definition, they can't show ads (If it's not silent, nobody would use it), and if it dies (like tr.im almost did), the links are worse than useless, even if the original pages remain. ...


13

As @Kop suggests it's primarily personal preference. From a historical perspective, the www prefix was de rigeur early on in the web to distinguish the host performing web service from other common services (ftp, smtp, gopher, ntp, dns, ...) and many organizations followed a naming scheme on their highest level domain with these common names to make it ...


13

This is a pretty good way to tell if you're on an SE site: I've never seen a copy-cat site that tried to trick you into thinking you're on an SE site; generally they just clone content to get hits. In any case, they can't trick you into giving them your account credentials since SE sites only offer OpenIDs; if a site asks you for your password it's not an ...


12

Ultimately, you're adding a link to your post that nobody will be able to click on; all it is saying is: it doesn't make much sense as a hyper-link, but will be fine for example as code: http://localhost:8080/whatever. We have, however, changed the error message to: Links cannot contain 'localhost' (try a full domain or wrap it in a code block).


12

Is there also a SEO advantage? No there isn't. It's really a matter of preference, do note though that omitting the www has the huge disadvantage that you can't create a cookie for the current domain only (as a cookie with "stackoverflow.com" would be interpreted as domain-wide, including subdomains like "a.stackoverflow.com"). For this reason I ...


12

Have you read the URI RFC? It's almost surprisingly useful reading for questions like these. Certainly, if I had your task assigned to me, I'd re-read it before I started. Per the RFC, the path is for hierarchical navigation (enabling, e.g., relative links). It is intended to identify the resource. The query is intended to be interpreted by the resource. ...


12

It looks to me like the IDs that redirect are actually IDs of answers - so when you put in 2121721, that ID actually belongs to an answer to the question with the ID 2121212. Notice how it redirects to one of the answers, not just to the question. The reason they decrease is that the answer was created after the question. What this tells me is that the IDs ...


12

URLs on stack overflow are already pretty short, especially once you remove the post title and such. In your example, you aren't really saving that much. I think if you wanted something considerably shorter, you'd have to go to something like tinyurl has, and you'd end up with something like http://stackoverflow.com/url/D839d8D Which still wouldn't gain ...


11

You already have a profile url: http://stackoverflow.com/users/82961/faiz If you don't like the "faiz" part (perhaps you want to show your real name for resume purposes), you can put anything you want after that last "/" character to share around. The important part is the ID. For example, this works just fine: ...


11

Forget SEO, who cares about that! What does this link to? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12345 What does this link to? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12345/ponies-and-unicorns It seems to me that one is much clearer than the other, and preferable in all circumstances except in the case where you need an artifically short link. Which we also ...


10

Sites don't receive their own .com domain name anymore until they get enough traffic, with the notable exception of AskUbuntu. Also, as se.com is already owned by someone, it is impossible to do what you suggest.


10

You should read some of Matt Cutts' later stuff. Like the one posted in 2009 about the canonical tag: An ugly url such as http://www.example.com/page.html?sid=asdf314159265 can specify in the HEAD part of the document the following: <link rel="canonical" href="http://example.com/page.html"/> That tells search engines that the preferred ...


10

I think this is a serious concern. A better solution for mobile sites would be something more akin to what Reddit is Fun did. When you click on a post in Reddit is Fun you get three options: Upvote / Downvote ( takes 50% of the left of a modal box ) Links ( if clicked on brings you to links ) Reply ( gives you the option to take part in a discussion ) ...


9

Look for The genuine Stack Exchange™©® Logo in the upper left! All Stack Exchange (2.0) sites will have it. It's also your global network inbox, so it's particularly important to click on and know about. You can't miss it, really.


9

Too much of an edge condition. Remember that Markdown does not support "naked" URLs officially, so you have your pick of non-naked URLs to use here: <http://example.com/foo__bar__baz#hash> <a href="http://example.com/foo__bar__baz#hash">link</a> [link](<http://example.com/foo__bar__baz#hash>) ...


9

Not really. The number is the question ID that uniquely identifies the question. The title slug is entirely optional (and often truncated if it's too long, anyway): http://stackoverflow.com/questions/123/foobar http://stackoverflow.com/questions/123/ both lead to the same page. Using the title as a primary identifier wouldn't make sense: it's not ...


9

First, I agree with Joel C. in that shortened links are occasionally a necessary evil: There are a few cases where the shortened links are necessary. For example, try linking to anything in the Internet Archive's wayback machine or a screenshot on browsershots.org. The markdown chokes and it just won't work without an intermediary. This makes an outright ...


9

http://www.google.com/codesearch/p?hl=fr#Lhpgg-dZ4PI/timeline/trunk/src/webapp/api/scripts/sources.js&q=DefaultEventSource%20package:http://simile-widgets.googlecode.com&sa=N&cd=3&ct=rc&l=224 I think the space in your URL is what is breaking it (understandably). If you replace it with a %20, then it appears to work for all possible ...



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