To confirm the veracity of information on a website you need to check your information on more than one site. Once you begin finding the same information repeated, you can be assured that the information is valid.
this is a problem I also want to know. But no one understand it .
Press Ctrl-U to see the source of the web page you want to know. Or you can click "view" on the tool bar and then "Page Source."
meat
Finding subdirectories on a webpage that is not your own is often times a difficult task. Many subdirectories can be found by checking the source code of a webpage.
To get the page source of a webpage, you can right-click on the page in your web browser and select "View Page Source" or "Inspect," depending on your browser. Alternatively, you can press Ctrl + U (Windows) or Cmd + Option + U (Mac) to directly open the source in a new tab. This will display the HTML code of the webpage, which you can then copy or analyze as needed.
Do you mean source code? If so, the source code is the actual code a person or program writes up to makes a webpage/site display and function in the desired fashion. It can often be found by right clicking on a webpage and selecting "View Source code"
It can be but source code is just the code of a webpage. Whatever format it is.
All media producers have have a purpose
In Internet Explorer, you can 'View Source'. This is found by clicking view > source.
You are probably referring to the source code of the page. So it's just the source-code of a webpage.
When citing a website with no author in-text, use the title of the webpage in quotation marks ("Title of Webpage").
who created this page