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    4. How important is the file extension in the URL for images?

    How important is the file extension in the URL for images?

    Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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    • Guest
      Guest last edited by

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      dsbud Martijn_Scheijbeler willcritchlow 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote -6
      • dsbud
        dsbud @Guest last edited by

        This isn't accurate. File extension (in the url path) is not the same as the **Content-Type **response header. Browsers respect the response header Content-Type over whatever extension I use in the path.

        Example: try serving a file /golden-retriever.png with a content type of image/jpeg. Your browser will understand the file as a .jpg. If you attempt to save, your browser will correct to golden-retriever.jpg.

        You can route URLs however you want.

        Additionally, I'm not aware of any way browsers "leverage cache by content type". Browsers handle cache by the etag/expires header.

        Guest 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • Martijn_Scheijbeler
          Martijn_Scheijbeler @Guest last edited by

          @James Wolff: I'm really hoping you're being sarcastic here. As it's totally fine to serve it without the extension. There are many more ways for a crawler to understand what type a file is. Including what @MarathonRunner is talking about here.

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                  • Martijn_Scheijbeler
                    Martijn_Scheijbeler @Guest last edited by

                    Do you need a new keyboard?

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                    • Martijn_Scheijbeler
                      Martijn_Scheijbeler @Guest last edited by

                      https://finance.yahoo.com/news/brutal-poll-shows-most-people-214647063.html Good luck!

                      Guest 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • dsbud
                        dsbud @Guest last edited by

                        Again, you're mistaken. The Content-Type response header tells the browser what type of file the resource is (mime type). This is _completely different _from the file extension in URL paths.

                        In fact, on the web all the file extensions are faked through the URL path. For example, this page's URL path is:

                        https://moz.com/community/q/how-important-is-the-file-extension-in-the-url-for-images

                        It's not

                        https://moz.com/community/q/how-important-is-the-file-extension-in-the-url-for-images.**html**

                        How does the browser know the the page is an html doc? Because of the Content-Type response header. The faked "extension" in the URL path, is unnecessary.

                        You can view http response headers for any URL using this tool.

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                          • Martijn_Scheijbeler
                            Martijn_Scheijbeler @Guest last edited by

                            If you really did your research you would have noticed the header image is not using an extension.

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                              • willcritchlow
                                willcritchlow last edited by

                                @MarathonRunner - you are correct in your inline responses - it's totally valid to serve an image (or other filetype) without an extension, with its type identified by the Content-Type. Sorry that you've had a less-than-helpful experience here so far.

                                To answer your original questions:

                                1. From an SEO perspective, there is no need that I know of for your images to have a file extension - the content type should be fine
                                2. However - I have no reason to think that a filename in the Content-Disposition header will be recognised as a ranking signal - what you are describing is a rare use-case and I haven't seen any evidence that it would be recognised by the search engines as being the "real" filename

                                If you can't always refer to the image by its keyword-rich filename, then could you:

                                • Serve it as you propose (though without the Content-Disposition filename)
                                • Serve a rel="canonical" link to a keyword-rich filename (https://example.com/images/golden-retriever in your example)
                                • Also serve the image on that URL

                                This only helps if you are able to serve the image on the /images/golden-retriever path, but need to have it available at /images/123456 for inclusion in your own HTML templates.

                                I hope that helps.

                                dsbud 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                                • willcritchlow
                                  willcritchlow @Guest last edited by

                                  Hi James. I've responded with what I believe is a correct answer to MarathonRunner's question. There are a few inaccuracies in your responses to this thread - as pointed out by others below - please can you target your future responses to areas where you are confident that you are correct and helpful? Many thanks.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • dsbud
                                    dsbud @willcritchlow last edited by

                                    @Will Thank you so much for this response. Very helpful.

                                    "If you can't always refer to the image by its keyword-rich filename"...

                                    If I'm already including the canonical link header on the image, and am able to serve from both /images/123456 and /images/golden-retriever (canonical), is there any benefit to referencing the canonical over the other in my image tags?

                                    willcritchlow 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • willcritchlow
                                      willcritchlow @dsbud last edited by

                                      In theory, there should be no difference - the canonical header should mean that Google treats the inclusion of /images/123456 as exactly the same as including /images/golden-retriever.

                                      It is slightly messier so I think that if it was easy, I'd go down the route of only ever using the /golden-retriever version - but if that's difficult, this is theoretically the same so should be fine.

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