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arnold on Sep 19, 2023
This article is going to show how to install WordPress in the subdirectory of a WordPress website.
Different questions that this article may answer:
“How to install wordpress in new folder”
“How to add wordpress to existing website”
“How to run multiple wordpress sites on one hosting”
“What is the difference between wordpress multisite vs subdirectories”
“Wow to install more than one wordpress on cpanel”
“How To separate wordpress site from main site”
“How to do a wordpress subfolder install”
“How to install wordpress inside another website”
“How to add wordpress blog to current site”
“How to do a softaculous install in wordpress subdirectory”
What Does It Mean To Install WordPress In A Subdirectory?
What all the questions are trying to find out is how to install a new standalone version of WordPress into a folder on your website.
To explain this simply, A subdirectory is like a folder within a folder on a website. When you install WordPress in a subdirectory, you are putting all the WordPress files within their own dedicated folder on your web server.
For example, your main website is located at the root folder – www.yourdomain.com. If you install WordPress in a subfolder called ‘blog’, the WordPress files and homepage will be accessed at www.yourdomain.com/blog.
The WordPress portion has its own separate system but it still exists under the main website domain. This allows the WordPress part to be managed independently without affecting the broader site.
Installing WordPress in a subdirectory keeps it organized and segmented from the other files and content on your hosting account. It’s an easy way to have a WordPress site within your main site without mixing up all the files.
The subdirectory acts like a mini WordPress installation within your existing website. It allows you to take advantage of the WordPress system while keeping it contained in its own section.
Why Install WordPress In A Subdirectory?
Installing WordPress in a subdirectory using Softaculous can be a great option for web developers and site owners. There are a few key reasons why you may want to install WordPress this way:
Managing multiple WordPress sites: If you host multiple WordPress sites on one hosting account, installing them in subdirectories helps keep them organized and separate from each other. This is easier to manage than having all the WordPress files mixed together in one location.
Testing new themes/plugins: Having a WordPress site in a subdirectory allows you to use it as a development/testing environment to test out new themes, plugins or site changes without affecting your main live site.
Adding a blog to an existing site: Adding a WordPress blog to an existing website is simplified by installing it in a subdirectory like /blog. This keeps it separate but still part of your main site.
Better security: Installations in subdirectories can benefit from added security measures like limiting access to certain files/folders. This can reduce the attack surface area.
Separate concerns: Keeping WordPress as a subsection of your main site allows you to separate blogging content from your main site content and branding.
The overall benefit is having an organized, secure and simplified approach to running multiple WordPress sites within one hosting account. Using Softaculous to auto-install WordPress in a subdirectory makes the process quick and hassle-free.
Why Are We Installing WordPress In A Subfolder?
The main purpose of installing WordPress in a subdirectory for your website is to allow you to keep your existing resume site visible on the home page, while also building out a totally separate WordPress site that will not be publicly accessible. By putting WordPress in a folder like ‘/client’, you can develop and configure a new website using WordPress without disturbing your live resume page at the root domain. The WordPress demo site will be configured and designed how you like, with new themes, plugins, and content, but it will only be available to you while in development. Installing WordPress in a subdirectory allows you to keep your public-facing resume fully operational at the root while also having a private staging site for testing that won’t be visible to outside visitors until you’re ready to launch it. This keeps your in-progress work tucked out of sight.
How To Install WordPress Into A Subdirectory?
The following instructions will show you how to install WordPress into a subfolder called client. When you are installing make sure you add something to the “In directory” field or you will overwrite your website and have to redo the resume assignment.