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12 answers

It means Uniform Resource Locator, if you look at the top of you web browser, you will see a long thin white box. the URL is what you type into, like 'http://www.yahoo.com' or 'http:///www.google.com'. it is used to locate different website and files on the Internet. any file has a unique URL and if you type it in, you can get that file.

2007-02-01 02:50:37 · answer #1 · answered by Salem E 2 · 0 0

URL- Uniform Resource Locator or Universal Resource Locator
Also called URI.

I ll give u the basic idea.
URL is nothing but a place where the data is stored.
At first it was an IP address,
IP address is used to identify a particular system.
You can think about roll number given to the students in schools and colleges.

At first the users use to type the IP address like 172.168.49.9
But later more and more sites had been developed and its very difficult for the user to remember these Port no. So they found a new way to keep a name that can be easily remembered by the users.
Its like http://www.yahoo.com

2007-02-01 04:04:41 · answer #2 · answered by Sudha P 2 · 0 0

url means uniform resource locator

Locator, the global address of documents and other resources on the World Wide Web.

The first part of the address indicates what protocol to use, and the second part specifies the IP address or the domain name where the resource is located.

For example, the two URLs below point to two different files at the domain pcwebopedia.com. The first specifies an executable file that should be fetched using the FTP protocol; the second specifies a Web page that should be fetched using the HTTP protocol:

2007-02-01 03:13:38 · answer #3 · answered by Ani 1 · 0 0

A URL, or Uniform Resource Locator, is the location of a file on the Web. When you type the address of a Web page into your browser, you are typing a URL. The most common format of a URL is illustrated by the URL of this page: http://www.yahoo.com

2007-02-01 02:49:34 · answer #4 · answered by fisi_b 2 · 0 0

URL = Uniform Resource Locator
Also: URI = Uniform Resource Identifier

Simply, it's the web address to a document or location.

For a bit more explanation, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URL

2007-02-01 02:49:26 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is a technical, Web-related term used in two distinct meanings:

* in popular usage, it is a widespread synonym for Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) — many popular and technical texts will use the term "URL" when referring to URI;
* in strict technical usage, it is a subset of URI specific to identifiers that are primarily locators.

Every URI (and therefore every URL) begins with the scheme name that defines its namespace, purpose, and the syntax of the remaining part of the URI. Most Web-enabled programs will try to dereference a URI according to the semantics of its scheme and a context-specific heuristic. For example, a Web browser will usually dereference a http://example.org by performing an HTTP request to the host example.org, at the default HTTP port (see Port 80). Dereferencing URI mailto:bob@example.com will usually open a "Compose e-mail" window with the address bob@example.com in the "To" field.

2007-02-01 02:47:29 · answer #6 · answered by R L 3 · 0 0

URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator. However, it often used to stand for what is more correctly a URI or Uniform Resource Identifier. URI's are a uniform syntax for identifing web documents (although really much more than that). So a typical URI has a protocal (http: or ftp:) followed by a host name, usually seen as an alias (yahoo.com vs. 172.168.4.3), followed by a path (/questions/index.html). There are also additional parameters that can follow that by a '?' (index.html?user=me).

2007-02-01 02:53:27 · answer #7 · answered by Greg 2 · 0 0

Uniform Resource Locator
Look in the address bar of your browser. URLs look like this
http://www.example.com/

Generally: protocol://user@host/path

2007-02-01 03:02:35 · answer #8 · answered by talis 3 · 0 0

the URL is address of the internet page.

it will be the "http:// ....."

thing at the top of your page.

go to the wiki page source below if you want more details

2007-02-01 02:46:52 · answer #9 · answered by Mike 5 · 0 0

Universal Resource Locator

Basically any web address, such as "www.yahoo.com"

2007-02-01 02:47:05 · answer #10 · answered by waynebudd 6 · 0 1

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