It came to my attention that some people are not sure how to use @LeoGlossary and what to do.
For this reason, we will hold a bit of a tutorial. Being uncertain is not a way to approach this so, for those hesitant to ask, we will cover it here.
The idea behind LeoGlossary is to optimize our Leofinance content. We do this by creating internal links to other content on here. LeoGlossary is designed to give us a lot of options in terms of word and phrases.
At present, we cover cryptocurrency, investing, and finance. We are also in the process of adding Splinterlands terms for all content related to that.
Ultimately, we want to get Leofinance ranking in the search engines (mostly Google since that is the only that really matters). With all the content created, if we can get a few URLs tied to particular keywords, we might get some traffic heading to this site.
So let us begin.
LeoGlossary Main Menu
It all starts with the Main Menu. Here is where we find hundreds of terms tied to the different categories mentioned above. Also, as you can see, there is a link to the new SplinterGlossary which is going to be built out over the next couple weeks.
Here is what the page looks like. I highlighted SplinterGlossary along with the term we will focus upon airdrop.
So we click on the word airdrop (or right click to open in a new tab) and this is what comes up.
This is the webpage we want to link in our article or comment. Hence, we have to link "airdrop" to the URL.
How To Link A Webpage
Markdown can be a bit tricky. Fortunately, this is some simple coding.
We start by wrapping airdrop in []. Thus, in the article we are writing we do this:
[airdrop]
The next step is to get the link tied to it. We do this by using the () around the URL. There were copy the URL from the top ofour web browser.
For those who are not sure what this means, the URL for this page is:
https://leofinance.io/@leoglossary/leoglossary-airdrop
Therefore, we will do this:
(https://leofinance.io/@leoglossary/leoglossary-airdrop)
Obviously, I broke it up for the purpose here. When you are doing it in an article or comment, the ]( are back-to-back.
When put together, you get airdrop. If you hover over the word with your cursor, you will see the webpage at the bottom of the screen (if on desktop).
That is all there is to it.
SplinterGlossary
As mentioned, we are going to build out a page with links for Splinterlands content. The person who volunteered to step in for that project is @gadrian. He is already using the links for his daily content so he understands the premise of what is being done here.
If you have any suggestions relating to Splinterlands content, send him a DM. Please dont bombard the page with ideas. Give him some time to fill it in. He stated he has about 80 words already that is going to be added to the page.
And this is how we basically close out our second week of @leoglossary.
Now it is on to week 3. Another section is already in the works.
If you found this article informative, please give an upvote and rehive.
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Posted Using LeoFinance Beta