• I’d like my blog URL to be http://example.com and my wordpress URL to be http://example.com/wordpress. I’ve printed off the “Giving WordPress its Own Directory While Leaving Core in the Root Directory” instructions from codex.wordpress.org

    The instructions to move WordPress look like Greek to me. I have no idea where I’m supposed to create the new location for the core WordPress files, and I don’t know how to move the core files to the new location. I also have no idea where to locate the index.php and htaccess files in the WordPress directory.

    I am brand new to this. Are there more comprehensive instructions somewhere? (Perhaps with images. LOL)

    TIA

Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • do you have ftp access to your site, or a cpanel or such file manager access to your site?

    Thread Starter mincognita

    (@mincognita)

    I have a file manager within cpanel.

    I’m having the same problem too. Even after following the details.
    Somehow it messes up with the url structure. I followed word by word on the codex support to no avail.

    I am in the same boat… same issue. I get everything to work but have two problems:
    1) I seem to have no .htaccess file (for some reason)
    2)Step 11…–If you have set up Permalinks, go to the Permalinks panel and update your Permalink structure. WordPress will automatically update your .htaccess file if it has the appropriate file permissions. If WordPress can’t write to your .htaccess file, it will display the new rewrite rules to you, which you should manually copy into your .htaccess file (in the same directory as the main index.php file.)
    …Does not work! I also get a messed up URL structure.

    This is very frustrating and would be really appreciative of anyone that can help solve this problem.

    Hi, I am also trying to do this. Has anyone successfully done this?

    If you can’t figure out how to leave WP in a subdirectory and make it look like it’s in root, then you may want to use an alternative. Leave WP in a subdirectory and redirect your root to that subdirectory.

    See the video at the link below for setting up the redirect.

    http://educhalk.org/blog/?p=84

    If you need help installing WP in a subdirectory, then see the video in the first post on that same site. And, notice that site has a redirect set-up…if you go to educhalk.org you get automatically redirected to /blog

    Moderator Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)

    (@ipstenu)

    🏳️‍🌈 Advisor and Activist

    annedpjohnson, hundreds upon thousands of people have done this successfully. It’s really not that hard.

    You need to make a new .htaccess and index.php file in root, then you change the URLs in WordPress admin side, and re-set your permalinks. It takes all of 5 minutes to do.

    http://codex.wordpress.org/Giving_WordPress_Its_Own_Directory

Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • The topic ‘Giving WordPress to its Own Directory’ is closed to new replies.