More Advanced Examples of Word Lists

Oh, and there is another cool thing you can do with word lists. By putting 50% in front of any reference to a word list, it will mean that that entry will appear only 50% of the time. You could easily change this to 10% or 90% or any other percentage. This allows you to construct pages that have some degree of variability. For example, hit refresh a few times and watch this sentence change:

    nifty example of randomness

Baffling Advanced Examples of Word Lists

You can also temporarily preserve a selected word by using STATIC in front of the word list name. For example:

navy navy navy navy

When you look at this page as an example cloaked pages, the above list will repeat the same keywords over and over. What is super-powerful about the envelope-pushing Templates is that you can of course construct your own HTML. For example, I can use a word list that contains names of colors to create HTML that uses those colors. Check it out:

    A color
    A color
    A color
    A color
    A color
    A color

And by using the STATIC, I can repeat the color that I used to tell everyone the actual name of that color...

    green
    navy
    green
    indigo
    darkblue
    darkgreen
    midnightblue

You see, the STATIC remembers the last used selection from that list and repeats it. This is a nifty way to repeat words over and over. For example, each cloaked page could focus on a particular word. This page might focus on the nifty word midnightblue. And we can repeat midnightblue as many times as we like, in many different combinations. midnightblue midnightblue midnightblue midnightblue. And if you hit Refresh on this page, you will see that the word will change. Neat, eh?


Stupendous Simple Examples of Word Lists

Please carefully read all of the content in each example paragraph BEFORE looking at an "example" cloaked page.

Templates runs through each "paragraph template" that you have created and whenever they find SQUARE brackets, well, they will run the special Templates language to see what to do. This language lets you randomly include words in documents such as this.

For example, using this neat syntax will randomly select between the word "easy" and "neat". If you hit refresh on this page, chances are good that you will get the other word. You can use this syntax many times in your document to vary the content that will be displayed from visit to visit by the search engine spiders. Of course, you may have MANY different options you want to present, not just two words. Templates gives you special syntax for this in its word lists. You can create a word list (as I have done) called "adjective". You can fill that word list with as many adjectives as you like. And then whenever you use great syntax like that, well, a random adjective will be presented. You see, whenever you repeat a "word list" name surrounded by brackets, it will randomly select a word from that wordlist. So you can do grand brilliant nifty things like this.

Here is an example of random colors:

    darkdlategrey darkgreen navy midnightblue indigo

Oh, and you don't have to create lots of new word lists... you can use the ones you already created in the Keywords tab... you will see that for each list that there is a bracketed name above, such as title1, title2, words, descfinal, and so on. Just surround these titles with brackets, and you will get a random word. For example: copy xbox 360 games xbox 360 game saves Xbox 360 case mods cool video games.