What about using .htaccess for redirection for example, to redirect a single 
page:

Redirect 301  /oldpage.html  http://www.example.com/newpage.html



Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: CC: PHP General List <php-general@lists.php.net>
From: Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Robert Cummings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 27 May 2008 18:04:02 +0100
Subject: Re: [PHP] Header Redirect

 On 27 May 2008, at 17:54, Robert Cummings wrote:
> On Tue, 2008-05-27 at 17:10 +0100, Stut wrote:
>> On 27 May 2008, at 17:06, Yui Hiroaki wrote:
>>> I would like to have some question.
>>>
>>> For example,
>>> I am in http://example.com/?12324242
>>>
>>> I would like to REDIRECT from  http://example.com/?1312323232
>>> to  http://example.com/
>>>
>>> I can REDIRECT from http://example.com/index.php to http://example.com
>>>
>>>
>>> Please do tell me how I can redirect!
>>>
>>>
>>> This is the sample what I test below!
>>>
>>> >>> if ($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] == '/index.php') {
>>> header("HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently");
>>> header("Location: http:///example.com/";);
>>> exit();
>>> }
>>> ?>
>>
>> 1) Why? Redirects should be avoided where possible for performance
>> reasons.
>
> Didn't this topic get covered several months back. I always do  
> redirects
> so as not to bugger browser history, titles, indexing, etc. If someone
> requests a page and they need to be logged in, I redirect to the login
> page, I never just present the login page... that's just incorrect  
> from

Personally I tend to only use redirects when a form handler has done  
it's job to avoid evil messages when the user hits back. However, I  
have used both redirected and non-redirected login workflows in the  
past for various reasons, and I don't believe there is a "standard"  
way to do it. It depends on how the site will be used and by whom.

> a hierarchical and semantic point of view. Similarly, if I'm doing 404
> handling with fuzzy request sniffing to determine what was actually
> requested, I again perform a redirect once I've ascertained what was
> probably desired. If you don't, then Google and other search engines
> will index these malformed URLs instead of the correct URL.

The correct response to a 404 page is 404. No arguments. If you  
redirect missing pages then your site effectively contains an infinite  
number of pages. By all means display a useful page when you return  
your 404 but not marking it as a missing page does little if anything  
for your SEO rank and absolutely nothing for your users.

IMHO if you're going to use a semantic argument to defend one point  
you need to carry that attitude throughout.

-Stut

-- 
http://stut.net/

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