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Also known as: Uniform Resource Locator, Web address
In full:
Uniform Resource Locator
Related Topics:
Internet
query string
domain name
IP address
file

URL, compact string of numbers, letters, and symbols that a computer uses to find a resource on a network and act upon it. URLs are often colloquially referred to as Web addresses, or simply addresses, since Web pages are the most common resources that users employ URLs to find. However, all files storable on a server have their own unique URLs, from Web pages and applications to documents, videos, and images.

The format of a URL was standardized in 1994 by the network working group of the Internet Engineering Task force (IETF), which included World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee. Initially, URLs were expressible only in the characters of the American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII). This limitation has now been surmounted with software that automatically converts URLs written in other languages (International Resource Identifiers, or IRIs) into ASCII text.

URLs can be quite long, but only four segments are typically referenced by users, all of which are on display in the URL https://www.britannica.com/technology/url. Those segments are, in order: the scheme (or protocol) used to access the resource (https), an optional subdomain name (www), the domain or Internet protocol (IP) address of the server (Britannica.com), and, if necessary, the path (/technology/url).

The scheme represents the method by which the files are to be exchanged or transferred. A standard protocol used today is the hypertext transfer protocol secure (HTTPS), which tells a Web browser to display a requested Web page, typically in hypertext format (HTML). Other common protocols are the file transfer protocol (FTP), for transferring files, and the simple mail transfer protocol (SMTP), for sending e-mail. The specified protocol is followed by a colon and two forward slashes.

The protocol is sometimes followed by a subdomain name, which means the URL is the address of a subsection of the main website. If the subdomain name is www, standing for the World Wide Web, the subdomain should either send the site’s visitor directly to the main site or homepage. Many subdomain names reference the type of content that a visitor can expect from the subdomain—for example, play.google.com.

The domain name (again, such as Britannica) is the unique identifier of the website. A domain name is followed by a domain extension or top-level domain (TLD), which theoretically specifies the site’s purpose. Examples include .biz for business, .gov for government agencies, and .mil for military sites. The .com extension originally designated websites made for commercial use but is now considered generic. An extension may also indicate the country in which the domain name is registered—for example, www.royal.uk. More than one extension may be used as well, as in the case of www.news.com.au.

Finally, a user might add a path onto the end of the URL—that is, the path through the structure of the website that the computer will have to take to find the desired file. Each additional step that the computer must take is bracketed by forward slashes. This Web page’s address of www.britannica.com/technology/url identifies it as residing within the /technology subdirectory.

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For a more fulsome example of a URL that might appear in a browser after a user has searched for a desired file, consider the URL https://www.domainname.com:80/subdirectory1/subdirectory2/file.html?key1=value1&value1&key2=value2#bookmark.

The number 80 in the longer URL above is the number of the port used to access the desired resource. Ports are technical “gates” reserved for different purposes, such as file servers or Web servers. Web browsers must connect to the appropriate port in order to access a server’s resources. However, the port is usually unnecessary for a user to specify while searching for a certain Web page, because the Web server will use the standard port for the HTTPS protocol.

The section of the example URL following the question mark is the query string. A query string can be composed of additional search parameters beyond the base URL, such as the specific words input into a search engine. These parameters appear as key/value pairs separated by ampersand (&) symbols.

Finally, #bookmark in the above example is a URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) fragment. The number sign, known in this context as an anchor, acts like a bookmark within the resource, instructing the Web browser to show the content at that particular point. For example, a number sign followed by a word is an anchor at that word in an online document.

Adam Volle