NCSA Mosaic for Microsoft Windows User's Guide
NCSA Mosaic and the Web employ a standard addressing mechanism, the
Uniform Resource Locator (URL) scheme, to locate and retrieve documents
anywhere on the Internet. A URL consists of three parts: a code identifying
the transfer protocol to be used, an address identifying the machine
on which the file resides, and a pathname-like descriptor locating
the item on that machine.
NCSA Mosaic and HTML shield users from URLs most of the time; the URL
is embedded in the HTML document source code that generates a highlighted
hyperlink. When a user views a document and selects a hyperlink, NCSA
Mosaic uses the URL in the document source file to automatically retrieve
the indicated document.
URLs are discussed in ``A Brief Guide to URLs.'' This
appendix also provides a pointer to the more complete Beginner's
Guide to URLs.
National Center for Supercomputing Applications / mosaic-win@ncsa.uiuc.edu