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28 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
World Wide Web
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(also referred to as simply the Web) is information contained on the vast network of interconnected computers known as the internet.
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Web sites
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are related collections of files stored on those computers
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HTML
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stands for Hypertext Markup Language, the authoring language used to create pages for the World Wide Web(WWW).
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HTML documents or HTML files
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text files made up of text and HTML instructions. Each of these instructions are called a tab. Together these tags and texts make up the document's source code, often called the source or code.
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Web page
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a single text file that has been marked up(annotated)with HTML tags so it is viewable on any operating system using any browser.
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Web browser
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a collection of related Web Pages and other files housed in the same directory on a Web server.
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Hyperlinks
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specially-formatted text or graphics users click to move from one file to another on the World Wide Web.
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URL or uniform resource locator
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the exact Internet and address of a Web file
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search engine
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a Web-based program that helps you locate information on the Web.
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W3C or World Wide Web Consortium
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an independent industry consortium that develops common protocols and sets new Web standards to promote WWW evolution and ensure interoperability among products and platforms.
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storyboarding
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to show the elements you want to include and how you want them arranged on the Web pages.
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head section
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contains identifying and descriptive information.
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meta tags
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add information that helps search engines identify and describe your page content.
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description
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lets you give mote detail about your page content.
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keywords
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allows you to list words users might type into a search engine.
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page title
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information that does not appear in the browser window; instead appears in the title bar at the top of the browser window.
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body section
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falls between the opening and closing body tags.
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DHTML
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(dynamic HTML)
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XML
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(extensible markup language)
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attributes
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additional instruction
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Stacked tags
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tags that are closed before the next tag begins or are opened after the previous tag has ended.
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nested tags
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tags that are fully contained within another tag.
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upload
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(transfer)
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user ID
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(a unique identifying name) and a valid password also assigned by your server administrator
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File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
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one of the most common methods of transferring files to a server.
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FTP client
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programs, that let you transfer files without having to remember a list of command-line FTP instructions.
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Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP)
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files are encrypted for additional security.
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extension specific
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meaning that they do not preform properly unless specific files, called extensions, are stored on the Web server and unless the sites are published and updated using the application's publishing interface.
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