A URL which includes the name of a server, as well as the full path to a document. For instance, http://www.mtholyoke.edu/marylyon/. See also: relative URL, URL
Contains the entire path of a website address. Example: http://www.cisco.com/jobs. See relative URL.
a complete URL that specifies the exact location of the object on the Web, including the protocol that's being used (in this case, http), the host name (in this case, www
The complete URL that gives all the information necessary to find a file or document on the internet, including protocol type, system name, pathname, and file name. See also Uniform Resource Locator.
Absolute URL is the name given to the full internet address of a page. This includes the http:// and the www part of the address. Also see relative URL.
The full address of a document on the World Wide Web, needed for creating external links.
A URL (Universal Resource Locator) is the Internet equivalent of addresses. Like other types of addresses, they move from the general to the specific (from zip code to recipient, so to speak). Take this URL, for example: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/adm/index.html First you have the protocol: http:/ then the server address or domain: /www.mtholyoke.edu and finally the directory: /adm/ in which the file index.html resides. See also Relative URL and URL.
The full address of a page or other resource on the Internet. An absolute URL includes a protocol, such as "http," a network location, and an optional path and file name. For example, http://www.example.com/ is an absolute URL.
The Internet address of a page or other World Wide Web resource that includes the protocol and complete network location of the page or file. The absolute URL includes a protocol, such as "http," network location, and optional path and file name. For example, http://www.acme.com/welcome.html is an absolute URL.
a URL that contains the entire address identifying the machine, directory and file.
The full Internet address of a page or other World Wide Web resource. The absolute URL (uniform resource locator) includes a protocol, such as “http,” network location, and optional path and file name. For example, http://www.amerWeb.com is an absolute URL.
A path to a file that includes the entire address, such as http://redrival.com/chriscassell/handouts.html
The Absolute URL describes the complete Internet address of a website. The absolute URL of this page is http://www.internet-direct-response.com/glossary.htm while the relative URL is glossary.htm
URL (Uniform Resource Locator) that contains the Internet domain name of the server hosting the item to which the URL refers. For example, an absolute URL would be of the same form as http://www.webliminal.com/search-web.html. The Internet domain name of this server is www.webliminal.com.
The full Internet address of a page or other World Wide Web resource. The absolute URL includes a protocol, such as "http," network location, and optional path and file name. For example, http://example.microsoft.com/ is an absolute URL. See also URL.
A fully qualified URL that specifies the location of a resource that resides on the Internet or an intranet. See also URL and relative URL.
An absolute URL is an URL which completely and unambiguously defines the location of a document or resource. It can be used out of context, but it will still point to the same file. If the meaning of the URL would change if it were taken out of context, it is called a relative URL.