Small fix for a problem that will affect very few users, but will be a very important fix for those users. Fixes the issues with sorting some of the columns of the 'All links' table ![]() Adds checkmark to the 'sort by' popup button above list of websites Fixes 'list' view of sitemap visualisation not appearing correctly when system in light mode When scanning locally (file://) and with the 'test anchors' setting switched on, could go into a loop Now this behaves as expected according to the preference. Fixes bug that may have prevented pdfs from correctly being included in the sitemap if the preference was checked or caused them to be included even if the preference was unchecked. These will expand / collapse all items in the current view, if the view is expandable, eg by page, by status, Spelling by word. Adds Expand All and Collapse All to View menu with keyboard shortcuts, and buttons for those functions to the toolbar palette. Fixes a bug that caused 'urls' containing a bunch of javascript to appear as bad links under very specific and unlikely circumstances Now the images are given the status "missing image src" so that they can be distinguished from missing link urls in the By Status and other views. Previously 'flag missing link url' would also pick up img tags with missing src, if image check was switched on, but would confusingly mark them with the status "missing link url". More clearly marks image tags with empty source. potential horizontal scroll issue in SEO>Summary selected spellcheck language not being 'remembered' sometimes some false results in the spellcheck, which were due to concatenation of words with certain settings and when certain html tags run together Fixes a possible issue with character encoding In other words if an instance has been discovered at that point which doesn't have the nofollow keyword in its rel, then the link will be followed. Now observes rel=nofollow in a link, if at the point the engine comes to follow that link, *all instances discovered so far* are marked 'rel=nofollow'. This does raise some questions and the matter is left open at this point. ie if it is internal according to its domain, integrity does not mark it as an external link or treat it as external, ie not following it. Despite collecting the data and possibly generating a warning, Integrity does not *observe* the rel=external at this point. This may be deliberate and is legal but there are serious SEO implications if it happens unintentionally. Now generates a warning if a link that appears to be internal (from its domain) but is marked rel=external. Fixes a problem with the link inspector not displaying all instances of the link url if it appears multiple times on a particular page Opens and scans a list of links in HTML, CSV, plain text format, or XML sitemap.On finish, send an email, save a report, open a file or Applescript, FTP the sitemap XML, and other actions.Scheduling made easy with a few easy clicks (the old method using iCal will still work).Website monitoring of as many URL's as you like with a choice of alerts and logging.Search your site (source or visible text) obtain a list of pages containing a search term or not containing a search term.XML Sitemap generation, optionally include images / pdf pages. ![]() A cocoa framework for the website crawling/spidering engine is available for you to try. I'd like it to be used in other apps that need to crawl a website. Many years of work have gone into developing and supporting the fast and accurate website crawling/spidering engine that Integrity and Scrutiny use. ![]() Uses the standard OSX functionality and your custom dictionary. Run a spelling and/or grammar check, view the results by misspelled word or by page. Set up rules for your priority/change frequency or edit these manually. Shows a list of warnings such as missing title/description, thin content, keyword stuffed pages, images without alt text, mixed content and much more.Įxport an xml sitemap for submission to the search engines (and in other formats too). Choose whether to treat the http and https versions as one site or separate, and to list any links to http pages or http resources on https pages.Īfter a single scan, Scrutiny for macOS holds a vast amount of information about your site. Also features to support and assist your migration to https. With more power and options - authenticate (scan sites that require logging in) test links within pdf documents, render js before parsing. The same fast, efficient, accurate engine. It'll allow 30 days free use with only exporting disabled.Īll the features of Integrity and Integrity Plus. ![]() This is a completely free upgrade for v5 users and there is an upgrade path from v4. Native cocoa app (i.e., not Java) fast and efficient. Scrutiny for Mac is a suite of web optimization tools.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |