When search engines index your pages, each page title is captured and listed in the search results. The more descriptive your page title, the more like it is that someone will choose your page from all the search results.
Also, because most browsers put the title in the title bar of the window, you might have a limited number of words available. (although the text within the <title> tag can be of any length, it might be cut off by the browser when it’s displayed.) the following are some other examples of good titles:
<title >poisonous plants of north America </title>
<title>image editing: a tutorial </title>
<title>upcoming cemetery tours, summer 1999</title>
<title>installing the software: opening the CD case</title>
<title> Laura Lemay’s awesome home page</title >
Here are some not-se-good titles:
<title>part two</title >
<title>an example </title >
<title>Nigel Franklin Hobbes
<title>minutes of the second meeting of the fourth conference of the committee for the preservation of English roses, day four, after lunch</title>irst three days, you learned about the world wide web, how to organize and plan your websites, any why you need to use HTML to create a web page. Yesterday, you even created your first very simple webpage.
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