Wednesday 20 February 2013

Web Pages and How it Works






















When we talk about the essentials on how to design a website, individuals with such expertise on the said field, tagged as website designers, must first and foremost consider the basics of crafting s good webpage. Each and every web page is branded and acknowledged with a single / exclusive Uniform Resource Locator or simply URL.
 
Based from the exact definition of the term, web page or webpage (any of the two are proper to use) is a note down of information which can be readable and apt for the World Wide Web. This is a basic information storage wherein user can gain access through the use of a web browser and capable to be put on view through a computer monitor and / or a mobile device. The format comes usually in HTML or XTML which enables the web page to be navigated to any other web pages by way of the so-called hypertext links. These web pages often times includes other sources namely scripts, style sheets and images which are hooked on to their concluding presentation. Web pages can also be recovered or reclaimed from a local personal computer and also from a distant web server. This web server may put a ceiling on it or even hamper its accessibility unto a private network, a company intranet for example. On the contrary, web server can also allow the publishing of web pages on the World Wide Web. These published web pages can be accessible for the web servers by means of HTTP or the Hypertext Transfer Protocol. Web pages may present documents containing static text and supplementary subject matters stored up in the file system of the web server or the static web pages. This can also put up by server-side software if it is only requested – this is called dynamic web pages. Basically, the above mentioned are the differences between the static web pages and the dynamic web pages. If the web designer would like to make his or her web page more receptive or interesting to user once they are in a client browser, client-side scripting is the best option to do such.

Web pages, as stated a while back, need to be attractive too. This may be gained through the proper 
blend of colors in texts or the backdrops. Most of the time, web pages inhibit links to more images and may even contain links to other forms of media and these are enclosed onto the final layout. The actual layout, typographic and the color format are outsourced by CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) directions. These factors can be either set in the HTML or may be supplied separately through a file reference contained in the HTML.

Moreover, the images are piled up on the web server as independent and unattached file. However, HTTP permits it only when a web page is downloaded on a web browser, the web user should request for the image or stylesheet that he chose so that it would also be processed. Upon processing the request, the web server will retain its connection to the browser until the requested item has been granted. The web browser comes usually with images next to the text and all other materials on display on the user’s computer monitor.

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