The Deluxe One-Minute Dofollow WordPress Upgrade

Post #401 categorized as Function, WordPress, last updated on Nov 5, 2007
Tagged with comments, dofollow, hack, links, nofollow, php, tutorials, WordPress

After our previous article, we all know how easy it is to kill the default nofollow attributes that WordPress automatically injects into all commentator, trackback, and pingback links. Indeed, our original one-minute upgrade delivers dofollow links across the board, effectively passing the love juice to every type of response. Fine for some, but some need more..

In this article, we improve the original dofollow upgrade by differentiating between the three different response types. With our “deluxe” model, nofollow attributes may be removed selectively from trackbacks, pingbacks, commentator links, or any combination thereof. For example, you may remove nofollow from commentator links while dishing full juice to trackbacks and pingbacks.

Ready? Let’s do this thing..

Step 1) First, open the file wp-includes/comment-functions.php and locate the function get_comment_author_link(). In WordPress 2.0, 2.1, and 2.2, we see something similar to this:

function get_comment_author_link() {
	global $comment;
	$url    = get_comment_author_url();
	$author = get_comment_author();

	if ( empty( $url ) || 'http://' == $url )
		$return = $author;
	else
		$return = "<a href='$url' rel='external nofollow'>$author</a>";
	return apply_filters('get_comment_author_link', $return);
}

Step 2) Next, upgrade that dry, crusty default code with our juicy deluxe model:

// Deluxe One-Minute Dofollow WordPress Upgrade
function get_comment_author_link() {
	global $comment;
	$url    = get_comment_author_url();
	$author = get_comment_author();
		if ( empty( $url ) || 'http://' == $url )
			$return = $author;
		elseif ( $comment->comment_type == 'pingback' )
			$return = '<a href="'.$url.'" rel="external nofollow">'.$author.'</a>';
		elseif ( $comment->comment_type == 'trackback' )
			$return = '<a href="'.$url.'" rel="external nofollow">'.$author.'</a>';
		else
			$return = '<a href="'.$url.'" rel="external nofollow">'.$author.'</a>';
	return apply_filters('get_comment_author_link', $return);
}

Step 3) Finally, remove any/all of the three nofollow attributes that you desire. Upload, check, and done!

Final thoughts..

Beyond the selective deliverance of piping hot G-juice, the “Deluxe One-Minute Upgrade” (hey, I had to call it something) provides complete control over the markup and presentation of commentator links, trackbacks, and pingbacks. If anything, look at this hack as a friendly way into the dark heart of the WordPress core. Use it to incorporate response-specific (X)HTML markup, CSS styles, DOM behaviors — whatever! After the customization of your nofollow strategy, the sky’s the limit!

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7 Responses

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#1Chino Yray

why not release a better DoFollow Plugin?

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#2Perishable

I am considering it.. There are already ten great dofollow-related plugins available that provide a great deal of control over the nofollow-removal process. So, if I develop a dofollow plugin, I would try to focus on features that are not currently available. Perhaps today I will play around and see if anything worthwhile comes of it.
Either way, I appreciate the suggestion!

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#3Peter

Thank you for this Upgrade. I implemented it on several blogs of mine. What I would really like is a tool to distinguish between high and low quality commentators

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#4Perishable

Yes, that would be a useful feature, indeed. In your opinion, what are a few variables that could be used to determine the inherent value of commentators?

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#5relojes de pulsera

There are some plugins that remove nofollow after a few comments, that may be a good option for those seeking a different tool ..

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#6Jeff Starr

@relojes de pulsera: absolutely. Here is a complete list of all WordPress dofollow plugins. Plenty of options from which to choose. Thanks for the feedback!

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