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PR will increase or not ?

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Cheapquality

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I hope I've understood your question. You seem to be asking something like: "Does an incoming link increase the PR just of the page linked to, or of the whole site?"

If that is your question, this is my (slightly complicated) answer:

A link directly passes PR only to the page that it links to, not to others in the same site.

However...

The more PR a linking page has, the more PR links from it pass on to other pages.

Because a link to a page increases its PR, links from a page that receives a link will now pass more PR than they did before.

So, if a page receiving a link links to other pages in the same site, the link it received will indirectly increase the PR of those other pages (because the page now has more PR to pass on through its own links).

(This will also increase the PR of the other pages, and so the PR of any pages that they link to, and so on ad infinitum.)

Hope that makes sense!
 
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Yes,
if i have : http://domain.com

and i have 200 hyperlink pages and article, and all are in other site, but in no any site, there is no word of my domain exactly like: http://domain.com so i will receive pr of my internal pages of site or not, means my overall site pr will increase when i search in any pr checker: http://domain.com
 
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There's no such thing as "overall site PR"; PR belongs to pages.

But, if your articles have PR (from external links) and link to your homepage, then your homepage will have PR (from your articles) even if there are no external links pointing directly to your homepage.
 
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but you see that, there is difference in pr checking. if we put www. and if we exlcude www to http:// result comes different :o
 
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It will increase cheapquality on both most likely.
 
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I'm not completely sure what you're asking anymore.

Technically, http://www.example.com/ and http://example.com/ are two different urls, and Google sometimes shows different PR depending on whether the "www" is present.

This is a bad thing; it has been known to lead to your site being split in two, leading to duplicate content penalities.

To help Google to identify which of the two versions you want used (i.e. which is the "canonical url"), you should 301 redirect one to the other. Redirecting example.com to www.example.com is most common.

If this is the problem that you're having, then a search on Google for "canonical url duplicate content" should turn up more information.

If not, please try explaining again.
 
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