Currently I'm working on a project in which i have to add multi-language functionalities to an existing website. The used link structure (URL:) is similar to: "www.sitename.com/page-alias/", this must stay the same even after the multi-language update.
URL's like this are not welcome:
- www.sitename.com/en/page-alias/
- www.sitename.com/nl/different-alias/
I managed to get the job done with a .htaccess rewrites on both www. (there is an active rewrite to change without www. to with www.) and a rewrite that removes the /en/ & /nl/ part.
The parts in my .htaccess file that does these changes:
#from without www. to www.
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^sitename\.com$
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.sitename.com/$1 [R=301,L]
#remove language from URL
RewriteRule ^en/(.*)$ /$1 [R=NC,L]
RewriteRule ^nl/(.*)$ /$1 [R=NC,L]
But, the CMS we use (CMS made simple) creates a link structure similar to the URL's displayed in the list below. Unfortunately their doesn't seem to be an easy way of changing the link structure made by the CMS:
- sitename.com/nl/page-alias/
- sitename.com/en/different-alias/
"No www." and "with language"
My question:
Does the link structure created by the CMS have:
- a negative effect on the indexing in search engines?
- duplicated content?
- any other drawbacks / negative influences?
Or does the .htaccess solve this problem?
- Do search engines notice that those different URL's all belong to one page and still give it the right indexation?
Keep in mind that the whole website(source) gets filled with incorrect links.
I hope you guys can help me understand / solve this.