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URLs

What is a URL? A URL is a Uniform Resource Locator. When you use your browser to surf the Internet, your browser needs a way to tell exactly what file you want to look at, and where it can be found. Not only can you point to a file in a directory, but that file and that directory can exist on any machine connected to the Internet, anywhere in the world. It can be provided for use by any of several different methods. It may even be something more complex than a file — URLs can point to queries, documents stored deep within databases, or the results of finger or archive commands.

When people give you the address to a web page, they may say it's at www.domain.com. Most web browsers in use today can use this form of a web address to take you to the correct page.

In years past, many browsers needed to have http:// included at the beginning of the URL to identify the destination as a web page. If you are using a computer that is more than a two or three years old, you may need to tell your web browser to open http://www.domain.com to get to the page you want. In addition, if you are visiting a web site at a location that has not been updated recently, you may need to include a trailing slash, as in:

http://www.domain.com/

This is the format for a correct URL to a home page for a domain. If you go to another page at that location, the subdirectory that holds that file and the name of the file will appear in the URL:

http://www.domain.com/directory/filename.html

The .html at the end of the full address tells the browser (and you) that you are looking at a web page. Other common extensions for web pages include .htm, .shtml, .asp, .php, and .cfm.

Sometimes, usually when you are filling out forms online or using an online shopping cart, if you look at the address in the box at the top of your browser, you will see the beginning of the URL change from http:// to https://. This indicates that you are visiting a site that has employed Secure Socket Layers (SSL) to protect your data.

Remember, you can also connect to FTP sites and gophers with your browser. If you go to these types of destination, you will need to be specific — FTP sites, for example, begin with ftp://, as in the address ftp://ftp.eticomm.net.


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