A type of Web page in which information from an electronic database is merged or pushed into a template. Dynamic pages are used to show online search results, materials from Web tools such as the ANGEL course management tool or event pages which are constantly updated.
A dynamic page on a website is one in which the information is pulled from an outside source, such as a databse. Dynamic pages are useful for things such as product catalogs. See also Static Page
a page that is generated by a database. this type of page typically contains characters such as ?, =, %, + in the URL. also called a dynamic URL.
A page on a website that can change what it displays without the code being altered. For example, a page that automatically uses a Christmas-themed logo when the month is December, but uses the standard logo for the rest of the year. See also Static page.
A dynamic page is a webpage which is flexible in changing content considering database information or user settings.
a Web page that changes in response to user input, the time of day, or other variable information, a consequence being that it cannot be easily indexed by a Web search engine. Back
A page that generates content "on-the-fly" as a user requests the page.
Pages built using a variety of different scripting environments and/or scripting languages. Generally, any page with an extension other than .htm or .html. By default, SmarterStats considers the following extensions to be dynamic pages: .ASP, .ASPX, .CFC, .CFM, .CFML, .CFMX, .CGI, .DLL, .JHTM, .JHTML, .JSP, .JWS, .MHT, .MHTML, .MV, .PHP, .PHP3, .PHTML, .PL, .SHTM, .SHTML, .STM, .WML, .XDL, .XHTML, .XML. Your administrator may set up additional extensions as downloads.
an unchanging page retrieved from disk
a page that compiles the displayed content of the page based on instructions inside the page, typically pulling in information held in a database
a resource that creates content either from user input or from some information in the device
a web page customized at runtime by an application server before the page is sent to a browser
Content changes frequently through use of content items. A news/announcement page, a student spotlight page, or a homework assignment page might be dynamic pages. The Elementary School Student Spotlight page, the Middle School Student Spotligh t page and the High School Student Spotlight page are all examples of dynamic pages. Entering a new item within one of those groups automatically causes a link to appear on the corresponding dynamic page.
This is a page that is generated automatically by a hosting servier at the time it is requested (on-the-fly).
Information on web pages which changes or is changed automatically (i.e. based on database content or user input). Sometimes it's possible to spot this technique by looking at a page's file extension. Search engines will currently index dynamic content in a similar fashion to static content, although certain configurations may pose indexing challenges.
Information on web pages which changes or is changed automatically (E.g. based on database content or user information). Sometimes it's possible to spot this technique by looking at a page's file extension. Search engines will currently index dynamic content in a similar fashion to static content, although they will not usually index URLs which contain the "?" character.
An interactive web page that can give you a response or feedback to your query
A page that generates content only when visited, using a scripting language like PHP or ASP
A page that generates contents on the fly as the user requests the page.
A web page that uses SSI, CGI, database calls, or scripting to create the content presented to the user's browser at the time that it is requested from the server. The framework of the page usually remains static and content is inserted into that framework. This can be used to insert the same header, footer, or menu into multiple pages making it easier to maintain the site. This is used with Coranto to separate the content management from the display of that content. See this Wikipedia Entry