Difference - Pages Vs Posts : Blogger
For new Bloggers it's important to know difference between posts and Pages
We see confusion, in Blogger Help Forum: How Do I?.
How do I publish a post, which always appears on the home page?
or
How do I publish a post, which never appears on the home page?
or
How do I publish multiple posts on a page?
Long ago, we used workarounds, like publishing a post, using a future or past date. The workarounds would create a post which would always, or never, appear on the home page - but there were always side effects, from using either technique.
In 2010, Blogger gave us static pages - pages which are created and look like posts - but never appear in archive, label, or main page displays, or in newsfeeds.
Static pages are not included in the posts newsfeed, or in the sitemap - and are only indexed by the search engines when linked intentionally in blog content. Since they are not part of the sitemap, static pages, when indexed, will not have the same weight as posts. If indexed by the search engines, static pages will not be as visible as normal post content.
We were able to link to the static pages, using tabs lists and linklists, that we could create, as we liked. The pages editor has the same look and feel as the posts editor - and pages have the same look and feel as posts.
In 2011, they gave us the Pages gadget, a prebuilt XML gadget, which we use to index both posts and pages. In 2012, they gave us Custom Permalinks and Redirects, which let us use our posts and pages in imaginative ways.
Some blog owners construct blogs like static websites - until they run up against the Blogger static pages limit.
The static pages limit will be a problem, for those who never bother to note the functional differences between dynamic pages (also known as "archive retrievals", "external links", "label searches", "link pages", and "posts"), and static pages (also known as "pages") - until their uncontrolled use of static pages restricts continued blog expansion.
See the "/p/"? That denotes a static page. A static page can appear like a single post, with slight differences.
The limit on static pages is a resource issue. Static pages require specific resources, pre allocated to every blog. Increasing the limit on static pages, as with increasing the limit on number of labels, would require a change to all blogs. Such resources are limited, just as everything is limited, in some way.
Even if you can have only up to 20 static pages, you can index an unlimited amount of dynamic pages, using the Pages gadget, and adding "Web address" entries. There is no limit, with dynamic pages.
When you add the combinations of dynamic and static pages, with the possibilities of custom redirects, you get many different possibilities, and different possible advantages - and this will look like magic, to the untrained eye.
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