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Duplicate content is a term used in the field of search engine optimization to describe content that appears on more than one web page. The duplicate content can be substantial parts of the content within or across domains and can be either exactly duplicate or closely similar. [ 1 ]
WPCleaner detects the duplicate arguments on analyzed pages, and is able to automatically fix some of them For a list of MediaWiki-populated tracking categories, see Special:TrackingCategories . Pages in category "Articles using duplicate arguments in template calls"
A deprecated response used by Shopify, instead of the 429 Too Many Requests response code, when too many URLs are requested within a certain time frame. [34] 430 Shopify Security Rejection Used by Shopify to signal that the request was deemed malicious. [35] 450 Blocked by Windows Parental Controls (Microsoft)
To use one of these, press edit above, and copy the name of the menu you want to use (but without the curly brackets) and paste it into the search box to the left and press "Go". Then press edit again and select and copy the whole page (using ctrl-C). Then create a new page called User:USERNAME/Menu, and paste what you copied to there. Edit it ...
Shopify is the name of its proprietary e-commerce platform for online stores and retail POS (point-of-sale) systems. The platform offers retailers a suite of services, including payments, marketing, shipping and customer engagement tools. [2] As of 2024, Shopify hosts 5.6 million active stores across more than 175 countries. [3]
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This category is hidden on its member pages—unless the corresponding user preference (Appearance → Show hidden categories) is set.; These categories can be used to track, build and organize lists of pages needing "attention en masse" (for example, pages using deprecated syntax), or that may need to be edited at someone's earliest convenience.
This page is an attempt to locate all such instances of this problem and fix them. A script was run on an offline copy of the database. First, it isolated all pages with duplicate headers. Then, it sliced each remaining page into three-word "chains" or "triplets" and looked to see how many of these chains appeared more than once.