file specification
At the end of the URL
File specification
The last part. The part after the last forward slash ( / ).
HTML pages do not create their complete URL. The URL is generated by the Web server. Part of the URL is the saved name of the HTML file (e.g. page.html). The rest of the URL depends on where the HTML document is saved on the Web server (e.g. www.webserver.com/directory/page.html). You specify the name of the Web page in the HTML file by using the <title>My Page Name</title> tags.
A relative link only contains part of the path, but never the drive, which is assumed to be C.
The pathname is the ending part of the URL. It is after the "slash" of the domain name.
Any image link is done the same way. You need the part of the code that contains the url, the part that contains the image and the part [optional] that contains the words that show up when you hover over the image. < a href= " url"> is the first part of the code. The next part is < img src= " image url"> That is the image url. If you want words to show under the mouse when you hover you add alt=" whatever you want to say"> after < img src=" image url"> So the finished code will be < a href=" url">< img src=" image url" alt=" whatever you want to say">
The first part to the URL is called protocol, which is http://. The second part is the domain name. It goes after the http://. http://www.dogs.com. So www.dog.com is the second part. The directory path is the third part. For example after .com would be, /about/. The file name is the fourth part. An example is after /about/index.HTML. So index.HTML is the fourth part. All together is would look like: http://www.dogs.com/about/index.HTML
A URL in the URL box contains a maximum of 2000 words. It cannot be extended beyond that limit.
A pathname is the location of a file or object in the context of a file system. A URL is the location of a file or object in the context of an internet web server.
It's your username and the name of your page.
Domain Name