Filter translatable strings
Source stringTranslation for TR
OR Provide the machine name of the view, and the machine name of the display, separated by a colon, i.e. 'view_name:display_id'. This will create a <a href=':url'>Summary View</a> list, which assumes each list item contains the url to a view page for the entity. The view rows should contain content (like teaser views) rather than fields for this to work correctly.
Use a token like [node:created:html_datetime].
The date of a seasonal business closure.
The actual body of the review.
The end of the availability of the product or service included in the offer.
Date after which the item is no longer available.
The date when the item becomes valid.
The date after which the price will no longer be available.
Publication date.
A string provided by <a href=':google'>Google</a>, full details are available from the <a href=':verify_url'>Google online help</a>.
Using the value 'width' tells certain mobile Internet Explorer browsers to display as-is, without being resized. Alternatively a numerical width may be used to indicate the desired page width the page should be rendered in: '240' is the suggested default, '176' for older browsers or '480' for newer devices with high DPI screens.
Some older mobile browsers will expect this meta tag to be set to 'true' to indicate that the site has been designed with mobile browsers in mind.
The URL to a logo file that is 150px by 150px.
The URL to a logo file that is 310px by 310px.
The URL to a logo file that is 70px by 70px.
The URL to a logo file that is 310px by 150px.
The URL to an image to use as the background for the live tile.
To use tokens to image fields, the image field on that entity bundle (content type, term, etc) must have the "Token" display settings enabled, the image field must not be hidden, and it must be set to output as an image, e.g. using the "Thumbnail" field formatter. It is also recommended to use an appropriate image style that resizes the image rather than output the original image; see individual meta tag descriptions for size recommendations.
Meta tags for displaying favicons of various sizes and types. All values should be either absolute or relative URLs. No effects are added to the "precomposed" icons.
The text to display in the title bar of a visitor's web browser when they view this page. This meta tag may also be used as the title of the page when a visitor bookmarks or favorites this page, or as the page title in a search engine result. It is common to append '[site:name]' to the end of this, so the site's name is automatically added. It is recommended that the title is no greater than 55 - 65 characters long, including spaces.
A brief and concise summary of the page's content that is a maximum of 160 characters in length. The description meta tag may be used by search engines to display a snippet about the page in search results.
A brief and concise summary of the page's content, preferably 150 characters or less. Where as the description meta tag may be used by search engines to display a snippet about the page in search results, the abstract tag may be used to archive a summary about the page. This meta tag is <em>no longer</em> supported by major search engines.
A comma-separated list of keywords about the page. This meta tag is <em>no longer</em> supported by most search engines.
Simple meta tags.
A location's formal name.
Geo-spatial information in 'latitude; longitude' format, e.g. '50.167958; -97.133185'; <a href='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographic_coordinate_system'>see Wikipedia for details</a>.
A location's two-letter international country code, with an optional two-letter region, e.g. 'US-NH' for New Hampshire in the USA.
Geo-spatial information in 'latitude, longitude' format, e.g. '50.167958, -97.133185'; <a href='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICBM_address'>see Wikipedia for details</a>.
A link to the preferred page location or URL of the content of this page, to help eliminate duplicate content penalties from search engines.
Used to define this page's language code. May be the two letter language code, e.g. "de" for German, or the two letter code with a dash and the two letter ISO country code, e.g. "de-AT" for German in Austria. Still used by Bing.