Interpreting a Relative path in a URL?

The reason for this 'apparent' inconsistency is that the learnyouahaskell site is using the base href tag in their source. This directs all domainless hrefs to use the base as their starting point Without the base tag it would have appeared as expected (the first link you post) and acted just like the math.colgate. Edu link.

The reason for this 'apparent' inconsistency is that the learnyouahaskell site is using the tag in their source. This directs all domainless hrefs to use the base as their starting point. Without the base tag it would have appeared as expected (the first link you post) and acted just like the math.colgate.Edu link.

I see, that makes perfect sense. Do other HTML tags exist that can change how links are resolved? – jjoelson Mar 3 at 1:59 Not directly in HTML, but I've seen it done w/ JavaScript picking up the event, or even with server 301/302 redirects.

Actual file location is also often obfuscated with frameworks such as fusebox where everything appears as a URI parameter. – iivel Mar 3 at 2:02.

The abbreviation URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator. Doesn't need a program to get parsed. This relative URL is usually much shorter than the full URL.

In most cases, the username, password and port number are omitted. Called a directory URL. Otherwise it is called a relative (local) URL.

What are relative URLs? Put simply, it's an URL which needs some processing before it is valid. Is a local URL, from which certain information is left out.

The URL of the current resource. Transformed into an absolute URL, which is then fetched as usual. A relative URL is always a local URL.

Same as that of the current URL. Name from the current directory URL. Append the local URL to the current one.

Relative URL: myessay. Relative URL: pics/background. Relative URL: ../cgi-bin/myscript.pl.

Refers to going "up" one directory on the server. The URL, not the actual directory tree on the server. In a totally different directory on the server.

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