Og: Https://ogp.me/ns# | Chrome |

Would you like a step‑by‑step guide to implementing Open Graph tags on a site?

| Property | Purpose | |----------|---------| | og:title | Title for the shared link | | og:type | Type of object (e.g., website , article , video.movie ) | | og:image | URL of an image to display | | og:url | Canonical URL of the page | | og:description | Short description | | og:site_name | Name of the website | | og:locale | Language/locale (e.g., en_US ) | og: https://ogp.me/ns#

in HTML <head> :

:

<meta property="og:title" content="Example Page" /> <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> <meta property="og:image" content="https://example.com/cover.jpg" /> <meta property="og:url" content="https://example.com/page.html" /> <meta property="og:description" content="An example page for Open Graph." /> Without Open Graph tags, social platforms may guess the title, image, and description, often incorrectly. With og: tags, you control exactly how your page appears when shared. Would you like a step‑by‑step guide to implementing

The feature you’re referring to, (Open Graph), is a set of metadata tags defined by the Open Graph protocol (namespace https://ogp.me/ns# ). The feature you’re referring to, (Open Graph), is

These tags allow web pages to become “rich objects” in social media feeds (Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, etc.) by controlling what appears when someone shares a link.

Og: Https://ogp.me/ns# | Chrome |