URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator. It is
the Web Address of a web page, or some other kind of document,
that is available on the Internet. It is the instruction to
your browser regarding the exact location on the Internet of
the page you want to visit.
http://
- The way that information is transferred by way of
the browser. That is known as the protocol. In this case the
browser is to use Hyper Text Transfer Protocol. The language
of web pages is known as HTML, Hypertext Markup Language.
Another common protocol is known as File Transfer Protocol,
or ftp://
www.mcsk12.net/
- The domain name, or location of the computer on the
World Wide Web which hosts the page. Once a domain is
registered the information provided by that domain must have
a host computer where the files are stored. That computer is
called a server. Some places are huge collections of servers
known as "server farms."
admin/ -
Servers which host huge collections of data must organize
that data in directories or file folders. Anything following
the domain name which is also followed by a slash is the
name of a directory.
tlapages/- Very large collections of data may require
sub-directories, or folders within folders. Your clue that
this is a sub directory is the slash following the
name.
entry_level_pc_index.htm
- This is the name of the file, or page, that you are
looking at right now. Each file in the directory must have a
unique name. Some get very complicated. Spaces should not be
in file names, and in this case have been indicated by the
underscore character.
Using URL's
A URL can be typed into the location box on your
browser. Type carefully, if one character is wrong you will not
get to the page. After typing in the URL press the Enter
key to go to the page.
Usually you will use a URL by following a link on another
web page. After reading these instructions you will go to the
cnn URL at the top of this page. When you get there put your
cursor over the CNN URL, but do not click. Your mouse
pointer will change to a hand indicating that the words are a
link to another page. Look in the gray bar at the bottom of
your browser window. You will see the URL of the place those
words link to. Go to the CNN URL and try
this. What you see will look similar to the image
below:
If you click gently one time on the cnn URL (on the page,
not the status bar) with the left mouse button the browser will
take you to the CNN page.
404 - File Not Found
For a variety of reasons, web pages disappear from the
Internet. If the page has been moved to another server most
webmasters provide a link redirecting you to the new page. If
there is no link to send you to the new location, try working
backward in the URL. One step at a time remove items up to the
next slash then press the Enter key. If you continue to
get "404 - File not found" each time, give up on the URL and
search for another.
Example: If the link
http://www.mcsk12.net/admin/tlapages/entry_level_pc_index.htm
did not work, try working backward in the URL.
http://www.mcsk12.net/admin/tlapages/
http://www.mcsk12.net/admin/
http://www.mcsk12.net/
If you still can't find what you were
looking for, it has probably been removed from the web.
Task - Examine the following URL and determine
how many directories are referred to.