@Azubuike – the WLW link is the resource file used for enabling support for Windows Live Writer. If you don’t use Live Writer, you can remove this link with any adverse effect. Cleaning up the header will actually help you since your important content will get moved up 1 line. Cleaning out unnecessary code also helps better your code to content ratio.
I stumbled upon to this article to clean out the header area as I started the new WordPress blog and checking out for unnecessary/useless codes to wipe out to make some improvement in loading time as well as to keep the source code short and relevant to what I generally use.
Huh! The snippet is from 2009, so it’s definitely been some time, but it still seems to be the documented way to do it. We’ll keep an eye out, but definitely let us know if you find something as well!
I never noticed that line in my code. WHY is that turned on by default? Who do we petition to get rid of it?
That would be wordpress, and I agree with you, it shouldn’t come stock with that on.
right now, i find that!
I don’t really understand the meaning of WLW Manifest File I would like to know what it means before I will know whether to remove or leave it.
@Azubuike – the WLW link is the resource file used for enabling support for Windows Live Writer. If you don’t use Live Writer, you can remove this link with any adverse effect. Cleaning up the header will actually help you since your important content will get moved up 1 line. Cleaning out unnecessary code also helps better your code to content ratio.
I stumbled upon to this article to clean out the header area as I started the new WordPress blog and checking out for unnecessary/useless codes to wipe out to make some improvement in loading time as well as to keep the source code short and relevant to what I generally use.
That would be WordPress, and I agree with you, it shouldn’t come stock with that on.
i try remove_action( ‘wp_head’, ‘wlwmanifest_link’); but nothing ….
Huh! The snippet is from 2009, so it’s definitely been some time, but it still seems to be the documented way to do it. We’ll keep an eye out, but definitely let us know if you find something as well!