Let's say there is a post on another site and it can be placed on our site inside the code. After we publish this post by wrapping it in an code, we take one word or phrase and try to do a search for this word on our site, the search cannot find the post where this word or phrase was used. I would like the material that is inside the code to be indexed inside the site, that is, if desired, the visitor could find it: is it possible to do this? I would be grateful for any advice that will help arrange this.
Thanks, Ksyusha. Unfortunately this is not possible; the WordPress Search Engine only indexes content stored in it's own database (not in a third-party ). There are two potential workarounds, though... (1) You could try a third-party search plugin, something that scrapes your site's content (rather than indexing the database), and subsequently replaces the WordPress native search. Services like Algolia come to mind, but you'd need to check with them to see if it will achieve what you want. (2) If the iFrame provider supplies a JSON or XML feed of the content, you may be able to import it directly into your own website (eliminating the iFrame, and directly hosting the content itself) using something like WP All Import.
SiteGround Hosting: bit.ly/website-hosting-setup
Starting a Side Hustle? wpupdoot.com/course/
Content Assistance: wpupdoot.com/grammar/
Privacy & Terms Generator: wpupdoot.com/compliance-generator/
Official website: wpupdoot.com/
Good evening I would like to know how to change source javascript in wordpress to prevent videos redirect to source page.
Truly good work!
Thanks, VM. I appreciate the prop's :-)
Thank you!
Happy to help, Brian :)
Let's say there is a post on another site and it can be placed on our site inside the code. After we publish this post by wrapping it in an code, we take one word or phrase and try to do a search for this word on our site, the search cannot find the post where this word or phrase was used. I would like the material that is inside the code to be indexed inside the site, that is, if desired, the visitor could find it: is it possible to do this? I would be grateful for any advice that will help arrange this.
Thanks, Ksyusha. Unfortunately this is not possible; the WordPress Search Engine only indexes content stored in it's own database (not in a third-party ). There are two potential workarounds, though...
(1) You could try a third-party search plugin, something that scrapes your site's content (rather than indexing the database), and subsequently replaces the WordPress native search. Services like Algolia come to mind, but you'd need to check with them to see if it will achieve what you want.
(2) If the iFrame provider supplies a JSON or XML feed of the content, you may be able to import it directly into your own website (eliminating the iFrame, and directly hosting the content itself) using something like WP All Import.
@@wpupdoot Thank you for the answer.
and what if you don't have the source?
it doesn't work for me when I try to embed a Figma prototype
Thanks, D. Do you have an example page? I might be able to diagnose what's going on with a link.
thanks
No problem