Bonjour,
J’ai exactement le même problème. Google prend la quasi totalité des mes url et ajoute un point virgule après . Evidemment ces url n’existent pas donc ça renvoie une erreur 404. Les pages sans ; à la fin sont bien correctement indexées mais je ne comprends pas pourquoi elles sont en doublons avec point-virgule ?
Merci pour votre aide.
Sandra
To resolve the issue with duplicate URLs containing semicolons and 404 errors, here’s what you can do:
Set up canonical tags for your pages by going to your page settings > SEO tab. In the “Canonical URL” field, enter the preferred version of your URL without semicolons. This tells search engines which version of your URL is the primary one, helping to avoid SEO penalties and consolidate ranking signals.
You should also verify your default domain settings in Project Settings > Hosting > Custom Domains. Ensure you have selected your preferred domain (either with or without ‘www’). This helps maintain consistent URLs across your site and prevents unexpected URL variations.
For existing pages with semicolon issues, check your page slugs in the Pages panel to ensure they don’t contain any special characters. Use only letters, numbers, and hyphens in your URLs for best practices.
Hopefully this helps! If you still need assistance, please reply here so somebody from the community can help.
Thank you for your answer. I was hesitating as I don’t understand the need to have it twice? Sleepie.fr and www.sleepie.fr ?
As for your 2 possibilities, I don’t think it’s the second one because it’s on too many pages (166).
The actual pages without the semicolons are successfully crawled and indexed yes.
Where could I look for the script you’re mentioning?
Thank you
You have one domain but those are the two different hostnames used to access your site. You want users to arrive at your site no matter which they type, so both are configured.
Conventionally the www subdomain is most popular for websites and Webflow designed to favor that one. You have it setup correctly.
That’s the only thing that matters. These 404s can likely be ignored, they likely won’t directly affect you, unless you’ve built some form of complex navigation or scripts that are broken.
I see all forms of backlinks very commonly, but the semicolons is weird which is why I’m suspicious of a script or e.g. bad CMS data that was somehow loaded and used to build some form of nav somewhere on your site.
But you’d know if you have an unusual large navigation built somewhere on your site that needs checked.
It could be on any page. All we know is Googlebot saw those links somewhere on the Internet and could not resolve them.