Forum Discussion
- JohnMorgan-c50cFormer Staff
Hi BJ,
Thanks for checking in on this! I understand you are looking for an update on a feature that checks broken links. We currently have this logged as a feature request, but there currently hasn't been any movement on this as we prioritize other requests. I'm going to include your voice in the request and we’ll update this discussion when there is any news to share about this.
- BarbaraJacobs-1Community Member
Thank you so much!
- MattTaylor-d4e0Community Member
I think this would be a very handy feature, i currently have to check all the links in our tutorials manually and as our collection grows it is becoming too time consuming.
Hi Matt!
Thanks for reaching out and sharing the feedback on how this feature could help streamline your workflow! I've added your voice to the feature report and will update this thread if it makes it onto our Feature Roadmap.
Have a great rest of your week!
- CindyCaldwell-eCommunity Member
Wanted to throw in my 2 cents and say "please pretty please" to auto-link checker. We used to use "SiteImprove" and it made QA so much easier. (not an affiliate, a fan)
- DustinLweCommunity Member
Please add my voice to this request as well.
- JudyNolletSuper Hero
IMHO, a "broken link checker" within the Articulate software would be minimally useful. Sure, perhaps it could find all the links that are truly broken, that is, links that are no longer active. The developer would still have to edit those links, either by correcting the URL (and re-checking it!) or deleting the link entirely.
But what about links that go to an active but wrong website? Those aren't "broken" in the same sense. But they are still incorrect and need to be fixed.
- The only way to find incorrect links is for a human to test every link to ensure it goes to the appropriate site.
- Okay, it might be possible to do this with AI. But, personally, I wouldn't trust AI to judge whether a working link is "correct" or not. In other words, it'd still require human testing.
Bottom line: The development schedule should include adequate time for quality-assurance testing, because it is an important part of the process.
- StephenMiller-8Community Member
We administer courses that collectively that contain 1000s of hyperlinks and recheck these links each semester before the course begins anew. Our solution is to use the app Integrity for Mac to check the HTML. It provides details of broken links, 404s and redirects. It's not failed us so far.
I appreciate your bottom line, but we do not have time for manual testing of these links beyond the initial course development.
- JudyNolletSuper Hero
I can understand why it'd be difficult to manually check 1000s of hyperlinks each semester. Thanks for telling folks about the Integrity for Mac app. It's always nice to hear about trustworthy tools!