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· 5 checks — Internal links, mixed-content guards, Open Graph previews, and structured data rolled into one auditable list.
SCORE
83
GRADE
B
FIX
1
REVIEW
2
PASS
2
INFO
0
Checks
5
2 PASS 2 REVIEW 1 FIX
F
Brand Presence
Action
Site-name consistency, favicon, social image, meta tags, schema, and contact signals
FIX

Brand Presence

Your brand name differs across channels — visitors see inconsistent identity.

F

31/100

Site name appears as

Page titleWelcome to a World of OCaml
og:site_nameOCaml
twitter:site
Organization.name

Inconsistent — names differ across channels

Brand assets

Favicon

8/15

single size only

Social share image

10/20

twitter:image set; og:image missing

Meta completeness

8/20

Organization schema

0/15

Contact info discoverable

0/10

no contact info discoverable

Findings

  • Brand name differs across channels — users see inconsistent identity
  • Add og:image — LinkedIn, Slack, Facebook ignore twitter:image
  • Single favicon only — add apple-touch-icon for iOS home-screen and high-DPI support
  • og:image missing
  • twitter:card missing
  • No Organization schema — Google can't render your logo in the knowledge panel
  • No discoverable contact info — trust signal is weak, legal risk is higher in regulated regions

How consistently your brand appears across channels — shared link previews, structured data, favicon, contact info.

C
Open Graph
Action
Open Graph tags are partially configured — some improvements recommended.
REVIEW
Open Graph tags are partially configured — some improvements recommended.
Warning::
Missing og:image
The og:image tag provides a preview image for social sharing.
Info::
Missing og:url
The og:url tag specifies the canonical URL for the shared content.
Info::
Missing twitter:card
Without twitter:card, Twitter falls back to Open Graph tags. Adding it gives you more control.

The og:image tag provides a preview image for social sharing.

Why this matters

No og:image means social shares are imageless — measurably less engaging than image-cards across every major platform.

Learn more

Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn all use og:image (or twitter:image as a fallback) for share-card thumbnails. Without one, the post renders as a text-only card. A 1200x630px image (Twitter's preferred size) covers all platforms.

Source: Open Graph Protocol

The og:url tag specifies the canonical URL for the shared content.

Why this matters

Without og:url, social platforms infer the canonical URL — often picking a tracking-param variant that pollutes share counts.

Learn more

og:url tells the social platform which URL to count this share against. Without it, platforms use the literal URL the user pasted (which may include utm_* parameters, ref codes, etc.). Setting og:url to the canonical form keeps share-count attribution clean.

Source: Open Graph Protocol

Without twitter:card, Twitter falls back to Open Graph tags. Adding it gives you more control.

Why this matters

Without twitter:card, Twitter renders posts as plain text — no preview image, no structured layout.

Learn more

Twitter requires `<meta name="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image">` (or summary) to render share-cards at all. Without it, links appear as raw text and engagement plummets vs cards. Twitter also falls back to og:image if twitter:image isn't set, so configure both.

Source: Twitter Developer Platform

Preview

www.ocaml.org

Welcome to a World of OCaml

OCaml is a general-purpose, industrial-strength programming language with an emphasis on expressiveness and safety.

WWW.OCAML.ORG

Welcome to a World of OCaml

OCaml is a general-purpose, industrial-strength programming language with an emphasis on expressiveness and safety.

Welcome to a World of OCaml

www.ocaml.org

www.ocaml.org

Welcome to a World of OCaml

OCaml is a general-purpose, industrial-strength programming language with an emphasis on expressiveness and safety.

C
Structured Data
Action
No structured data (JSON-LD) found.
REVIEW
No structured data (JSON-LD) found.
Info::
No structured data (JSON-LD) found
Adding structured data helps search engines understand your content and can enable rich results.

Adding structured data helps search engines understand your content and can enable rich results.

Why this matters

Without schema.org markup, your pages can't appear as rich results (stars, FAQs, recipes) in search.

Learn more

Structured data is what unlocks rich snippets — review stars, FAQ accordions, recipe cards, breadcrumbs, etc. — that take up more SERP space and dramatically improve click-through. The schema.org vocabulary is well-documented and JSON-LD is the easiest format.

Source: Google Search Central / schema.org

No structured data found

Structured data (JSON-LD) helps search engines understand your content better. Adding it can improve your search result appearance.

Common types include:

  • WebSite — your site identity and search box
  • Organization — your company information
  • Article — blog posts and news articles
  • Product — e-commerce product pages
  • BreadcrumbList — navigation paths
Learn more at schema.org
A+
Mixed Content
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS.
PASS
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS.
Info::
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS
All checks on this page are automated. Results are estimates - run targeted manual reviews when the score affects a release decision.

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