Forum Replies Created

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Thread Starter pelesl

    (@pelesl)

    SHEEESH! There is a bug with Google Analytics. I have several accounts with root domains (that is, your site is domain.com or https://www.domain.com) which work fine with the URL typed in without the https:// and without the trailing slash. However, it seems that if the URL of your site is not a root domain, for example, www.domain.com/SiteIWantToTrack, it will not work if you type in https://www.domain.com/SiteIWantToTrack, you must add the trailing slash, like this: https://www.domain.com/SiteIWantToTrack/

    In the end, I’m not using the plugin, but I suspect there is no difference.

    Thread Starter pelesl

    (@pelesl)

    whooami: Interesting…. I disabled the plugin, and then did as you said, pasting the code from google analytics into the footer.php file. Google still says it can’t find it, and I confirmed by viewing the source that it is in fact there. Does anyone knows if it still collects data even if the “status is unkown”?

    Thread Starter pelesl

    (@pelesl)

    whooami: the plugin inserts the code in the blog pages for me. That’s the whole point. Do you know of a way to tell it to put it somewhere else?

    Thread Starter pelesl

    (@pelesl)

    Google seems to recommend putting the code just above </body>. Is it being in the head making it impossible for google to find?

    Thread Starter pelesl

    (@pelesl)

    Oh, I also made sure there was an https:// in front of the URL inside my google analytics profile. The only other thing worth mentioning is that the blogs are not on a root domain, that is, they are mydomain.com/blog1 and mydomain.com/blog2. This shouldn’t be a problem, right? Any ideas?

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)