• Hello!

    The only thing I did is to put a plugin of the theme in wordpress. Which contains more features. The next day I saw in the google search console that the google bot from a smartphone reads the page not from a mobile but from a computer. In other words, it is the same as if you were logging in from a computer. In short, “mobile” does not see google that the page is mobile friendly. I log in from my mobile and it shows me the page normally as if it were mobile friendly.

    I disabled the plugin and google from mobile reads the page as if it is from a computer. In short, it does not read that it is mobile friendly.

    The question is that maybe the google cache has not been updated in some way?

    I know it’s purely a programming issue and it could be very simple, but I can’t solve it…

    https://ibb.co/G3cGY94

Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • Moderator bcworkz

    (@bcworkz)

    In search console, did you indicate to Google that the problem has been fixed?

    It takes a while for Google to confirm that flagged errors are fixed. In the search console error message, see when Googlebot last crawled the page. It’s likely before you removed the plugin.

    There can also be caching on your server further confusing the issue. If you have any caching plugins, the need to be cleared or flushed. Your host might also be caching, ask them if they are and if so, how to clear your site’s cache.

    Thread Starter Ilias Georgopoulos

    (@eliot1988)

    Thank you very much..!!

    Thread Starter Ilias Georgopoulos

    (@eliot1988)

    I’ve had the blog for about 1 month and I haven’t had any visits from google… it has crawled 1/3 of the blog. Does it take time to upload to google? If I knew how to better optimize the site, it would be better, you say? I don’t know any programming language.. And I can’t contact the person who made the theme because I don’t know English very well… I bought it very expensive.. Surely if someone knew how to set up the wordpress theme I would go up the steps on google.. .

    Moderator bcworkz

    (@bcworkz)

    Assuming all pages are listed in your sitemap, and that you’ve submitted the sitemap to Google, Google should eventually check all listed pages. It might take a few weeks, possibly longer on a very large site. In Search Console, if you go to Indexing > Pages, there’s a dropdown to select which view you want to see. The sum total of all pages should represent all of your site’s pages. There are likely some that were not indexed. The reasons for not indexing and which pages the reason applies to can be seen. You can inspect each URL to learn more details.

    If you have sitemap listings that are not represented anywhere in Search Console, it’s reasonable to assume that Google hasn’t yet crawled the page at all. Will it do so eventually? I would think so, but I’m not an expert of the inner workings of Google.

    Thread Starter Ilias Georgopoulos

    (@eliot1988)

    Moderator bcworkz

    (@bcworkz)

    Sorry, I’m not good at reading Greek. Even if it was all in English I’m not sure if I’d be much more help. The important information is within the Inspect URL link for each page that has an issue. Whatever the issue is, it needs to be resolved to have any hope of indexing the page. Google will simply not want to index some pages because they think it’s of no benefit to people searching.

    Sort of off topic, but doesn’t your sitemap.xml file have links to all those other sitemaps? If so, each one doesn’t need to be registered, you only need to submit the main sitemap that links to all the other files. Googlebot knows how to follow links ?? It probably does no harm to list them all, but FYI it’s unnecessary.

    Thread Starter Ilias Georgopoulos

    (@eliot1988)

    Thank you! Have a nice day!

    Thanks for taking the time to answer me!??

Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
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