Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) is the framework for creating fast-loading mobile web pages to improve user's mobile browser experience. AMP HTML is like your regular HTML, however with a number of rules and restrictions to facilitate honest user expertise.
1. AMP JS
2. AMP HTML
3. AMP Cache
AMP provides you the best JavaScript library which can provide managing resource handling, asynchronous loading and be giving custom tags to be used in AMP HTML. So the pages load as fast as possible.
AMP HTML is a bunch of custom AMP properties. It comes with some rules and restrictions on allowing reliable performance.
It's an optional proxy-based content delivery network (CDN). CDN takes your AMP HTML pages, caches them, and automatically optimizes your page performance.
You will maintain a minimum of 2 versions of any article page: The original version of your article page that users will typically see, and the second one is AMP version of that page.
If you are WordPress users, you need to download and install the WordPress plugin at GitHub, Here is a link - amp-wp GitHub page and click the “Download ZIP” button. You can install an AMP plugin on your WordPress site just as you would any other WordPress plugin.
Once you’re done installing and activating the plugin, append “/amp/” to your pages and if you don’t have a friendly permalink than appending with this “?amp=1”
For example,
Original Blog Post URL: https://domain.com/blog-post
AMP Blog Post URL: https://domain.com/blog-post/amp/
The AMP Discovery page mentions some platforms that would require Schema.org data to create your content eligible to seem within the demo of the Google Search news carousel. Check that you get your schema right.
I hope you get detailed about implementing AMP on your WordPress website. If you have any questions, feel free to share them by dropping a line below in the comments section.