last day (16 days later) » 

20:17
2
A: Rewrite URL without Redirect in .htaccess

MrWhite RewriteRule ^thankyou.html /thankyou/$1 [L] If the underlying file is thankyou.html then you have the rewrite the wrong way round. You should be rewriting the request from /thankyou/ (which I assume is the intended canonical URL) to /thankyou.html. And consequently you should be requesting (li...

Do you mind opening a chat where I can explain further? Otherwise, I have explained a bit more in my comment and also edited the question with some more details. Thank you.
My updated .htaccess file but to no avail. i.stack.imgur.com/V8AhQ.png
@user So, what URL are you requesting? .htaccess does not actually "change" the URLs, which sounds as if you are perhaps expecting? If you want the URL to look like /thankyou/ (note the trailing slash) then you need to be linking to href="/thankyou/" in your HTML source.
Perhaps I am taking the wrong approach. I just want to change the way the URL(s) appear on the client side. The JSON example from the question is exactly what I want to do with a 301 Permanent redirect. When I say re-write I just mean to modify the URL on the client-side. Sorry if my terminology is off.
@user You can implement an external 301 redirect (as well) in .htaccess from /thankyou.html to /thankyou/ (or /thankyou), but you must first actually change the URLs in the underlying HTML source code. You then implement a "rewrite" to internally rewrite the URL back again.
@user I've updated my answer with more explanation and an external redirect.
This is exactly what I wanted, thank you. I indeed had to change the /thankyou.html to /thankyou in order for it to work. When I've done it in the past on amplify with the JSON example I've never had to remove the .HTML extension from the hrefs. Do you know why that is?
I also have one more example.
So lets say I wanted to change this url: footmastercasters.com/sub/…
Would that be possible?
 
2 hours later…
22:00
> When I've done it in the past on amplify with the JSON example I've never had to remove the .HTML extension from the hrefs. Do you know why that is?
But does that update the HTML source? (I don't think it does - I don't see how it could? What you posted is simply a 301 redirect.) It will work the same on Apache. It will look as if it "works" at a casual glance. But if you don't remove the .html extension in the source then users can still "see" the .html URL, everytime a user clicks a link they will be externally redirected. Google will give warnings in GSC about "redirecting url" etc. etc.
It just changes the URL in the amplify instance. When you hover the hrefs it still shows .html and I am also getting .html pages in my google analytics tracking. Do I just make a copy that has ".html" removed from the hrefs to upload as the prod site?
Here is an example of a site I did through an amplify app that changes the target address with JSON. But the html files still have href="something.html"
I only started web-dev a year ago so I'm pretty new to this stuff. I definitely want to make sure I'm doing it the right way, so any advice from you is much welcome.
Basically yes. You need to link to your canonical URLs in your HTML source. In your example you are just removing the .html extension, but you could have a URL /thankyou that maps to the "file" /index.php. In fact, all URLs could map to the same file. And index.php determines the content to serve (a front-controller pattern) based on the URL being requested.
I've seen people update using href="http://example.com/something/" on the production site instead of local directory such as "./" - is this the correct practice?
when locally it would be /something.html"
so they use the full domain on the client-side instead of local paths
To be honest i've never seen it done using a front-controller pattern index.php file
For the .htaccess example, I have nearly 700 URLS that need to be modified... So the more efficient the better.
22:16
> Here is an example of a site I did through an amplify app that changes the target address with JSON.
Yes, that is not correct. I'm seeing `/about.html` (for example) in the link. When I "copy the URL" (right mouse option) I'm copying `/about.html` - which is the URL I would potentially "share". And when I click the link I'm 301 redirected to `/about` (this is a second HTTP request). There must be something that then routes the request from `/about` back to `/about.html`.
"There must be something that then routes the request from /about back to /about.html." - what is the best practice for that?
That depends on the system. On Apache, an internal rewrite using mod_rewrite (as outlined in my answer). When I mentioned "something"... I'm guessing that if you have not implemented this on "AWS Amplify" then maybe it does something "automatically"? Or maybe extensionless URLs "just work" anyway? (On Apache you can make extensionless URLs "just work" by using MultiViews - but then every file is accessible by just the extensionless URL, including all your assets etc.)
MultiViews is best avoided to be honest. It can result in unexpected conflicts.
>
I've seen people update using `href="http://example.com/something/"` on the production site instead of local directory such as "./" - is this the correct practice?
You should avoid using relative URLs (particularly to your static assets). Use root-relative (starting with a slash) or absolute (with scheme + hostname). Although abs URLs are going to problematic if you are writing these links manually and could make it hard to transfer from development to production.
The problem with relative URLs is that if you are suddenly rewriting from a different path depth (eg. you decide to change the URL of a page from /foo to /bar/foo) then all your links break (CSS, JS, images, etc.)
You should really avoid using "URLs" with ./ (dot indicating a CWD) - that is a filesystem concept, not a URL. (The dot ultimately ends up being resolved away, so it still "works".)
> So lets say I wanted to change this url: footmastercasters.com/sub/…
> To this: footmastercasters.com/…
(Please use backticks on URLs - they are truncated in the chat, unless I hover)
22:35
https://www.footmastercasters.com/sub/caster_detail.php?gm_code=pd01&gs_name=GD-40&gd_model_type=%ED%8F%89%ED%8C%90%EC%B7%A8%EB%B6%80%ED%98%95&gd_type2=NYN&gs_type=GD
to this
https://www.footmastercasters.com/leveling-casters/gd-series/gd-40-f-nyn/
I'm reading your other notes right now. This is so helpful.
To do that is the same principle, but just more complex. If you have many URLs (for your next project) look at front-controller pattern and "routers". The router script looks at the URL and then decides how it should be handled. The code in .htaccess is then very minimal, but all the routing logic is in your server-side script (eg. PHP). Won't work on a "static" site.
22:49
So there is a "index.php" file on the server but I'm unsure if it is doing what you describe. Unfortunately, I didn't make this site. It was made by Koreans so I have to translate everything note-wise. I can show you the contents of the index.php file to see if it may have what we are looking for. I'd much rather do this correctly and efficiently rather than make the .htaccess file 20k kb with 700 rewrite rules, haha.
This is the contents of the `index.php file:
`<?php
include_once('./_common.php');

define('_INDEX_', true);
if (!defined('_GNUBOARD_')) exit; // 개별 페이지 접근 불가

if(defined('G5_THEME_PATH')) {
require_once(G5_THEME_PATH.'/index.php');
return;
}

if (G5_IS_MOBILE) {
include_once(G5_MOBILE_PATH.'/index.php');
return;
}

include_once(G5_PATH.'/head.php');
?>

<h2 class="sound_only">최신글</h2>

<div class="latest_wr">
<!-- 최신글 시작 { -->

<?php
// 최신글
$sql = " select bo_table
from `{$g5['board_table']}` a left join `{$g5['group_table']}` b on (a.gr_id=b.gr_id)
at the root
Perhaps it's the other index.php file in the theme path.
23:31
Also, so for the revere site - if I update the hrefs locally to include the domain so there isn't two requests, is there a trick to still make the local files load?

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