> To be honest, I am not sure yet I fully understand a > relative link except that it is not a full or absolute link such
Reading URL for link, relative links area normal and desirable things (except when used in contexts that specify that absolute ones must be used). > as http://www.somedomain.net. The trick will be in putting the If you are currently viewing http://www.somedomain.net/subdirectory/weppage.html, and you see anotherpage.html, that is a relative link to: http://www.somedomain.net/subdirectory/anotherpage.html. ../index.html is a relative link to: http://www.somedomain.net/index.html, etc (".." means the same as in Unix and MS operating systems - move up a directory level). This means that the links within the site are independent of where the site is actually held - you can have the site in a subdirectory on your hard disk and all the links will still be consistent. You can also have a halfway house in which /index.html means http://www.somedomain.net/index.html, from anywhere in the site. It's generally bad practice for links within a site to be anything but relative. ; To UNSUBSCRIBE: Send "unsubscribe lynx-dev" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
