Introduction to HTML Glossary
This glossary is specifically limited to terms covered in the tutorial. If you are
looking for a long, comprehensive list of term and definitions, you should consult the Beginner's
Web Glossary.
- Anchor
- See Hyperlink.
- Browser
- A program used to load, view, and interact with Web documents. The most famous examples
of browsers are NCSA Mosaic and Netscape.
- Browser window
- The part of the browser's display where the contents of a document are displayed; in
graphical browsers, the window can be scrolled back and forth through a document. The text
you're reading at this moment is in the browser window.
- Content
- The actual 'meat' of a document -- all of the words, images, and links which a user can
read and interact with. I use this term a lot to mean "whatever you put in the
document."
- GIF file
- A graphic file of a specific format: the Graphic Interchange Format.
This format was developed by Compuserve and has become an Internet standard for exchanging
files across multiple platforms. All graphical Web browsers will load and place valid GIF
files.
- Go list
- See History List.
- History list
- The list of the documents you've visited during your current Web session. This may be
implemented differently by different browsers, but the idea is to let you quickly jump
back to a document you read earlier.
- Hyperlink
- A link from one document to another, or to any resource, or within a document. The
hyperlinked text is highlighted in some fashion. The default is usually blue, underlined
text, but your display may vary.
- HyperText Markup Language (HTML)
- The basis of the World Wide Web, and what the tutorial is intended to teach. HTML is a
Document Type Definition (DTD), or subset, of the Standard Generalized Markup Language
(SGML).
- In-line
- Almost always used in the context "in-line image," this refers to a resource
of some type which is placed directly into a document. As I say, this is nearly always an
image, but the future could see things like in-line animations.
- Netscape extensions
- HTML-type tags which are recognized by Netscape and were invented by the authors of that
program. Some of these tags are becoming standard, while others are not. See Appendix B.
- Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML)
- An open document definition language much in use in the publishing industry. HTML is a
definition under SGML.
- Text editor
- Any program which will do even the most basic word processing and will save files to
standard ASCII text. Check your program's manual if you are unsure of how this would be
done, as different programs will do things differently.
- URL
- The Uniform Resource Locator is a "standard" way of
easily expressing the location and data type of a resource. The general form of a URL is
"protocol://address" (for example, "gopher://gopher.cwru.edu/"). You
can read more about it at NCSA.
- Web browser
- See Browser.
- Whitespace
- Line feeds, carriage returns, spaces, and anything else which is definable content but
not a visible character.
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