Why is my GitHub site not showing?

Why is my GitHub site not showing?

If you have named your repository correctly like . github.io , and it is showing Github pages is under maintenance, then wait for a few minutes and then refresh. Your site will show up. But, if it is showing 404 error, then check if you have index.

Is GitHub Pages SEO friendly?

If your blog or product landing page is using GitHub Pages, it can now be optimized for SEO. By adding a simple {% seo %} to your site, GitHub will automatically add SEO metadata to each page. It even accounts for the page title, in addition to the description, canonical URL, next (and previous) URL and post metadata.

Is my GitHub username public?

After changing your username, your old username becomes available for anyone else to claim. Most references to your repositories under the old username automatically change to the new username.

Why is my GitHub page not showing up in Google search?

I first only did points 1-3 with the URL https:// .github.io/ /demo/ and the page still did not show up after waiting for a month. However after doing points (4) and (5) my github-pages site immediately showed up in the Google search results.

How can I get my GitHub page on Google?

On the other hand anyone can take a help of Google Webmaster, this would solve your problem in minutes 🙂 This is how I managed to get at least my github pages-page to be found on Google: paste your page URL to the “search bar” on the top of the search console and press .

Why is there no description in Google search?

You have a rule in your site’s robots.txt file* that prevents Google from reading the page (which is how we generate a description in search results). However, this doesn’t prevent Google from showing the page in Search results. Therefore if the page appears in Search results, it will appear without any description.

How to get Google to find my site in a Google search?

How do I get google to find my site in a google search? You have to create a Google Search Console account and add your page, then typically you just drop a “marker” file in the root (Search Console generates this) so that Google can confirm you really own the page.