Using the Wordpress more tag

lisa Lisa, 17th July 2010

Sometimes you see blogs and just from looking at the first page you can read the whole body of 10 articles. Other times you see blogs and you can only read the first paragraph or so before you have to click on a title or read more link to see the rest.

The default is to see everything - but if you want to lay things out so you just get headings and a brief intro to each article on a page, then you need to use the "more" tag.

Simply type your post as you would normally, and where ever you'd like to break the piece into a new section, place your mouse cursor and click on the "more" tag from the editor.

Which technique is better?

Well somepeople like reading the whole of an article, and then the next, and then the next, without having to click anywhere. So you're quite likely to hold someone's attention for longer by displaying everything for them in one go.

However at the same time, as each post in Wordpress does also have it's own page, you're actually showing Google duplicate content because you've got that article on your site - in it's entirety - twice. So you might not want to do that (or you might want to add a duplicate content plugin).

More from our blog

18a win Netty 2024 award for Activibees.com

18a win Netty 2024 award for Activibees.com

29.02.24

We are delighted to announce that 18a has been recognised for its outstanding work in the "Web Design Agency of the Year - UK" category at… Read →

Generating an Effective Content Security Policy with your Laravel React App

Generating an Effective Content Security Policy with your Laravel React App

27.02.24

I recently had an interesting problem to solve. I'd built a brand new author website on a shiny installation of Laravel 10, utilising its out-of-the-box… Read →

If your WordPress website looks broken, it could be because of this.

If your WordPress website looks broken, it could be because of this.

15.02.24

WordPress is the incredibly popular blogging-come-full-website platform that powers over 835 million websites* in 2024. It's functionality is extended by plugins, and one such very… Read →