I just posted this in a comment here: https://lemmy.ml/post/112460/comment/110439 (link goes to the “What are your most wanted Lemmy features?” post in the “lemmy” community)
I am following up now with this new post, because I just found https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/875 (link goes to the “Community name in post URL” issue on the lemmy project’s github, under the LemmyNet organization… note github has 2 of those 3 pieces of information in their URL) where I learned that @dessalines@lemmy.ml has actually thought about this and arrived at (imo) the wrong conclusion. Afaict, they have decided that having human-meaningful in URLs is “silly” and therefore we shouldn’t?!
I am hoping they’ll change their mind!
I think having no idea what a URL is about makes for a really lousy user experience. When people send me lemmy links, I want to have a clue as to what they’re about before I decide to click it. Maybe I’ve seen it before. Maybe it’s a meme, and I want to look at it later. Or maybe it’s the answer to a question I urgently need to know the answer to. So, I have to click to find out - often to discover it is just a meme i’ve seen 3 times already.
Having the community name and the post title in the URL would make my lemmy experience much better.
In my opinion, there is no benefit to lemmy URLs being short except for in the rare case that you need to transmit one verbally or on paper. But, in that case, you can actually just omit the post title when copying the URL, as there would still be a database ID preceding it! (Try it with a reddit URL: if you remove the title slug and just supply the database ID, it redirects you to the post’s canonical URL with the slug in it.)
Lemmy devs: please reconsider this!
Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.
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A common pattern here is making part of the URL human-readable but non-normative. For example instead of https://lemmy.ml/post/112460/comment/110439 you have https://lemmy.ml/post/Lemmy-112460/comment/Lemmy-URLs-should-be-human-meaningful-110439.
There are a couple of minor downsides here:
This pattern is used on a number of sites such as Stack Overflow and Reddit and seems to work well.
One way to get around #1… if there is text, it has to be specific text, either via a redirect or 404…
They already can be: https://lemmy.ml/post/152773#_Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human-meaningful
Either this, or using an optional
&title=
param is the only way I’d support this, and in that case you might as well include the whole post title, maybe changing spaces to underscores.I like the current model.
It is simple and short.
The only part I don’t like are the URLs with “data_type” and such things included that appears in some parts of Lemmy. (I don’t remember where).
You memorize lemmy post IDs?! They’re currently six digits here, and I can’t imagine why you would need to memorize one. It is sort of nice that they can be communicated verbally, though I doubt that actually happens very often. But, in any case, my proposal still allows for that because the title part can always still be omitted when entering the URL. Do you ever receive lemmy URLs in chat? I do, as I imagine many people do, and that is the case I would like to see improved.
I think the only URLs containing data_type that I’ve seen were 404 URLs from a bug in the inbox, sometimes triggered by reloading immediately after clicking “mark all as read”.
These links are completely ugly. Short links are perfectly clean and should be by default.
As a WebDev student we are taught to take into account that.
Recently, we started to modify an app (in order to learn BladeOne template engine) and got the way to show urls in a WebApp by “folder” addresses.
Basically, the WebApp overwrites the default web address and replace its structure following a hierarchy in the sense of
example.com/
,example.com/user/
(a list of users),example.com/user/1
(specific user),example.com/user/create
(create a new user), etc.And this is a recommended way here.
Should be the default why? Is recommended by who?
He’s full of it, haha
WebDev working standards.
Recommended by several Devs in development and in teaching.
Link to where “WebDev working standards” say URLs should be short? SEO benefits from more info in URL, and so does web browser history/bookmark search. Many platforms such as Reddit and Medium put the title (or part of it) in the URL.
Presenting your opinions as fact and quoting “standards and teaching” when asked does not advance the debate.
No, that is not a WebDev working standard. String-based IDs are legitimate as well, and can even be primary keys in a database.
It would be cool if Lemmy recognised its own links and just fetched the post title by itself so that the first part of your explanation became:
I just posted this in a comment here: What are your most wanted Lemmy features? (link goes to the…
I’d rather have the URLs be self-describing.
Automatically formatting issue numbers on sites like github is nice, but I think doing it with freeform titles mid sentence like that would be jarring more often than not.
On github I see @nutomic@lemmy.ml said “If we make this change, we should do it before releasing federation. After that it will get much harder to change the URLs.” - I haven’t looked closely at the data model but I’m optimistic that a graceful upgrade to a better URL format should not be a problem. Eg, this post is currently https://lemmy.ml/post/152773 and in my ideal world in the future that URL would become a redirect to a canonical URL such as https://lemmy.ml/post/152773/lemmy/Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human_meaningful or https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/152773/Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human_meaningful
Yes that migrating the urls would be possible. Just needs someone to implement it, as always ;)
cool, i’m glad to hear you’re amenable to this change!
maybe a good reason for me to finally start learning rust :)
(i’m not going to in the immediate future, however, so if someone else wants to do it please do!)
It would be a pretty complex change, probably better to start with something smaller first. Anyway its always good to have more contributors :)
I think it’s better to keeep the
/c/communityaddress
part so that only with reading the URL you can know where the discussion is taking place, also posts could be displayed with/p/
following how everything else is being displayed/c/, /u/
. but I agree with you. It would be much better.https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/p/Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human_meaningful
Beautiful.
That is a nice URL, but it omits any database ID, which means that you couldn’t have two posts with the same title. Also, you would need a more expensive database lookup to serve the URL. For wikis and blogs, I think using the post title as the unique key makes sense, but I don’t think that actually makes sense for lemmy.
Mmm, I see your point now. what about something like:
https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/p/XYZ123/Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human_meaningful
yeah, that seems reasonable.
https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/post/XYZ123 as the canonical url would be best IMO. Then the title following can be optional. But
post
instead ofp
seems like a good idea, not too much longer, but helps readability.c
instead ofcommunity
is fine because 1) community is kinda long and 2) the single letter prefix for communities is pretty well established by reddit and among all of its clones.Edit: comments would then be https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/post/XYZ123/comment/ABC456. Really just take the current address and add the community name. Plus the title as an optional path segment for readability.
Well, that is the exact opposite of what OP thinks, since it’s not human meaningful if title is optional. Also I don’t see the reason why
/post/
helps with readability more than/p/
.Adding the community name is a big help, and like I said, the post title can be there but not canonical. https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/post/152773/Lemmy_URLs_should_be_human-meaningful would work just as well as https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy/post/152773.
Just nicer tbh.
Ahh, I get your point, I think it could redirect by default to the human readable one but if one where to delete to only the ID should also work. Yeah, I understand the only title based URL part.
I disagree on being nicer, since it makes the URL larger and it does not follow the same pattern as everything else, but let’s agree on disagree on that part.