chortle.ccsu.edu
Here is the URL format, again:
Protocol://Host/Path
The path is relative to a root directory that the host computer has designated to be the start of all Web page path names. For example, on the computer that hosts these pages, the root directory is:
C:\InetPub\WWWRoot
With the following URL:
http://chortle.ccsu.edu/CS151/Notes/AppendixA/htmlPart2_11.html
...the host will look for the following file on its hard drive:
C:\InetPub\WWWRoot\CS151\Notes\AppendixA\htmlPart2_11.html
Note: URLs use the Unix-style forward slash ("/"). Microsoft operating systems use the backward slash ("\"). URLs are uniform across all operating systems, so always use the forward slash.
Usually the root directory contains a home page that is called something
like default.html
or index.html
.
If a URL does not include a path, then the host will send the home page.
For example:
http://chortle.ccsu.edu
implicitly asks for the file default.html
.