its a structure dude, for example there is no example and you have to find that example out to know the example.
did you get it yo
No it isn't Andy
its an alusion of the pants
True.
chemistry
The root domain
no
Global Catalog
A. P. Malozemoff has written: 'Magnetic domain walls in bubble materials' -- subject(s): Domain structure, Magnetic bubbles
Anna Kozarova has written: 'Structure-function studies between the regulatory domain of human PKCa [alpha] and the PKCa [alpha] catalytic domain'
The structure of a web address consists of a Domain Name, Directory Path and Filename. The following is an example outlining the structure:Domain Name: domain.comDirectory Path: someFilename: example.html
the root domainDNS namespace: DNS is the name service provided by the Internet for TCP/IP networks. DNS is broken up into domains, a logical organization of computers that exist in a larger network. The domains exist at different levels and connect in a hierarchy that resembles the root structure of a tree. Each domain extends from the node above it, beginning at the top with the root-level domain. Under the root-level domain are the top-level domains, under those are the second-level domains, and on down into subdomains. DNS namespace identifies the structure of the domains that combine to form a complete domain name. For example, in the domain name sub.secondary.com, "com" is the top-level domain, "secondary" identifies the secondary domain name (commonly a site hosted by an organization and/or business), and "sub" identifies a subdomain within the larger network. This entire DNS domain structure is called the DNS namespace. The name assigned to a domain or computer relates to its position in the namespace.
The structure of a web address consists of a Domain Name, Directory Path and Filename. The following is an example outlining the structure:Domain Name: domain.comDirectory Path: someFilename: example.html