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Glossary of Internet & Web Jargon
Information below from the UC Berkeley - Teaching Library Internet Workshops web site
- Buttons in most browsers' Tool Button Bar,
upper left. BACK returns you to the document previously viewed. FORWARD
goes to the next document, after you go BACK.
- If it seems like the BACK button does not work, check if you are in
a new Netscape window; some Web pages are programmed to open a new window
when you click on some links. Each window has its own short-term
search HISTORY. If this does not work, use GO to select the page you want (some Web pages are programmed
to disable BACK).
- BOOKMARK/FAVORITES
- Way in Netscape to store in your computer direct links to sites you
wish to return to. The equivalent in Internet Explorer (IE) is called
a "Favorite." To create a bookmark in Netscape, click on BOOKMARKS,
then ADD BOOKMARK. Or left-click on and drag the little bookmark icon
(in Netscape 4.6 and higher, to the right of the word BOOKMARK) to the
place you want a new bookmark filed. To visit a bookmarked site, click
on BOOKMARKS and select the site from the list.
- The equivalent in Internet Explorer to Netscape's Bookmarks is called
"Favorites."
- You can download a bookmark file to diskette and install it on another
computer. To do this in Netscape, select BOOKMARKS, then EDIT BOOKMARKS,
then, in the FILE menu, select SAVE AS. To do this in IE, select from
the main browser tool bar FILE, then Import and Export... and follow
directions for exporting to a file. Import (part of the same IE program)
allows you to bring a Netscape Bookmark file into IE as Favorites.
-
-
- BOOLEAN LOGIC
- Way to combine terms using "operators" such as "AND," "OR," "AND NOT"
and sometimes "NEAR." AND requires all terms appear in a record. OR
retrieves records with either term. AND NOT excludes terms. Parentheses
may be used to sequence operations and group words. Always enclose terms
joined by OR with parentheses. Which
search engines have this?
- See +REQUIRE or -REJECT TERM and FUZZY AND.
- BROWSE
- To follow links in a page, to shop around in a page, exploring what's
there, a bit like window shopping. The opposite of browsing a page is
searching it. When you search a page, you find a search box,
enter terms, and find all occurrences of the terms throughout the site.
When you browse, you have to guess which words on the page pertain to
your interests. Searching is usually more efficient, but sometimes you
find things by browsing that you might not find because you might not
think of the "right" term to search by.
- BROWSERS
- Browsers are software programs that enable you to view WWW documents.
They "translate" HTML-encoded files into the text, images, sounds, and
other features you see. Microsoft Internet Explorer (called simply IE),
Netscape, Mosaic, Macweb, and Netcruiser are examples of browsers that
enable you to view text and images and many other WWW features. They
are software that must be installed on your computer. For more information
about browsers, consult the introductory
pages of the Teaching Library tutorial. See also LYNX, a browser often used from slow modems because it
does not display images, colors, or sound, but lets you perform most
basic WWW functions and see the content.
- CACHE
- A cache temporarily stores web pages you have visited in your computer.
A copy of documents you retrieve is stored in cache. When you use GO,
BACK, or any other means to revisit a document, Netscape first check
to see if it is in cache and will retrieve it from there because it
is much faster than retrieving it from the server. If memory allocated
to cache in your computer becomes full, Netscape discards older documents.
- You can change the size of cache, although larger cache may affect
other operations and is limited by the amount of memory on your computer.
To change cache size, select Options, then Network Preferences, then
Cache. For more information, consult the Netscape
Essentials page.
- CASE SENSITIVE
- Capital letters (upper case) retrieve only upper case. Most search
tools are not case sensitive or only respond to initial capitals, as
in proper names. It is always safe to key all lower case (no capitals),
because lower case will always retrieve upper case. Which
search engines have this?
- CGI
- "Common Gateway Interface," the most common way Web programs interact
dynamically with users. Many search boxes and other applications that
result in a page with content tailored to the user's search terms rely
on CGI to process the data once it's submitted, to pass it to a background
program in JAVA, JAVASCRIPT, or another programming language, and
then to integrate the response into a display using HTML.
- COOKIE
- A message from a WEB SERVER computer, sent to and stored by your browser on your computer. When your computer consults
the originating server computer, the cookie is sent back to the server,
allowing it to respond to you according to the cookie's contents. The
main use for cookies is to provide customized Web pages according to
a profile of your interests. When you log onto a "customize" type of
invitation on a Web page and fill in your name and other information,
this may result in a cookie on your computer which that Web page will
access to appear to "know" you and provide what you want. If you fill
out these forms, you may also receive e-mail and other solicitation
independent of cookies.
- DOMAIN,
TOP LEVEL DOMAIN (TLD)
- Hierarchical
scheme for indicating logical and sometimes geographical venue of a
web-page from the network. In the US, common domains are .edu (education),
.gov (government agency), .net (network related), .com (commercial),
.org (nonprofit and research organizations). Outside the US, domains
indicate country: ca (Canada), uk (United Kingdom), au (Australia),
jp (Japan), fr (France), etc. Neither of these lists is exhaustive.
See also DNS entry.
- DOMAIN NAME, DOMAIN NAME SERVER
(DNS)ENTRY
- Any of these terms refers to the initial part of a URL, down to the first /, where the domain and name of
the host or SERVER computer are listed (most often in reversed
order, name first, then domain). The domain name gives you who "published"
a page, made it public by putting it on the Web.
- A domain name is translated in huge tables standardized across the
Internet into a numeric IP address unique the host computer sought. These
tables are maintained on computers called "Domain Name Servers." Whenever
you ask the browser to find a URL, the browser must consult the table
on the domain name server that particular computer is networked to consult.
- "Domain Name Server entry" frequently appears a browser
error message when you try to enter a URL. If this lookup fails for any reason, the "lacks DNS
entry" error occurs. The most common remedy is simply to try the URL
again, when the domain name server is less busy, and it will find the
entry (the corresponding numeric IP address). For more information,
see "All About
Domain Names."
-
- DOWNLOAD
- To copy something from a primary source to a more peripheral one,
as in saving something found on the Web (currently located on its server)
to diskette or to a file on your local hard drive. More
information.
- EXTENSION or FILE EXTENSION
- In Windows, DOS and some other operating systems, one or several letters
at the end of a filename. Filename extensions usually follow a period
(dot) and indicate the type of file. For example, this.txt denotes
a plain text file, that.htm or that.html denotes an HTML
file. Some common image extensions are picture.jpg or picture.jpeg
or picture.bmp or picture.gif
- FAVORITES
- In the Internet Explorer browser, a means
to get back to a URL you like, similar to Netscape's Bookmarks.
- FIELD SEARCHING
- Ability to limit a search by requiring word or phrase to appear in
a specific field of documents (e.g., title, url, link). See LIMITING TO FIELD.
- FIND
- Button in Netscape Tool Button Bar at top. Searches for word(s) keyed
in document in screen only. Useful to locate a term in a long document.
Can be invoked by the keyboard command, Ctrl+F.
- FRESHNESS
- How up-to-date a search engine database is, based primarily on how
often its spiders recirculate around the Web and
update their copies of the web pages they hold, and discover new ones.
Also determined by how quickly they integrate new sites that web authors
send to them. Two weeks is about as good as most search engines do,
but some update certain selected web sites more frequently.
- FRAMES
- A format for web documents that divides the screen into segments,
each with a scroll bar as if it were as "window" within the window.
Usually, selecting a category of documents in one frame shows the contents
of the category in another frame. To go BACK in a frame, position the
cursor in the frame an press the right mouse button, and select "Back
in frame" (or Forward).
- You can adjust frame dimensions by positioning the cursor over the
border between frames and dragging the border up/down or right/left
holding the mouse button down over the border.
- FTP
- File Transfer Protocol. Ability to transfer rapidly entire files from
one computer to another, intact for viewing or other purposes.
- FUZZY AND
- In ranking of results, documents with all terms
(Boolean AND) are ranked first, followed by documents containing any
terms (Boolean OR) are retrieved. The farther down, the fewer the terms,
although at least one should always be present.
- GO
- Button in Netscape Menu Bar at top. Provides list of recent sites
you visited, retained for the current session only. Click on any site
in the list to return to the site. For a more permanent marker, make
a BOOKMARK.
- HEAD or HEADER (of
HTML document)
- The top portion of the HTML source code behind Web pages, beginning
with <HEAD> and ending with </HEAD>. It contains the Title,
Description, Keywords fields and others that web page authors may use
to describe the page. The title appears in the title bar of most browsers,
but the other fields cannot be seen as part of the body of the page.
To view the <HEAD> portion of web pages in Netscape, click VIEW,
Page Source. In Internet Explorer, click VIEW, Source. Some search engines
will retrieve based on text in these fields.
- HISTORY, Search History
- Available by using the combined keystrokes CTRL + H, a more permanent
record of sites you have visited/retrieved than GO. You can set how many days your Netscape retains history
in Edit | Preferences, and in Internet Explorer in Tools | Internet
Options ? General.
- HOST
- Computer that provides web-documents to clients or users. See also
server.
- HTML
- Hypertext Markup Language. A standardized language of computer code,
imbedded in "source" documents behind all Web documents, containing
the textual content, images, links to other documents (and possibly
other applications such as sound or motion), and formatting instructions
for display on the screen. When you view a Web page, you are looking
at the product of this code working behind the scenes in conjunction
with your browser. Browsers are programmed to interpret HTML for display.
- HTML often imbeds within it other programming languages and applications
such as SGML, XML, Javascript, CGI-script and more. It is possible to
deliver or access and execute virtually any program via the WWW.
- You can see HTML in Netscape by selecting the View pop-down menu tab,
then "Document Source." If you download a document as "Source," the
file will contain HTML markup codes and can be viewed in Netscape and
other browsers.
- HYPERTEXT
- On the World Wide Web, the feature, built into HTML, that allows a text area, image, or other object
to become a "link" (as if in a chain) that retrieves another computer
file (another Web page, image, sound file, or other document) on the
Internet. The range of possibilities is limited by
the ability of the computer retrieving the outside file to view, play,
or otherwise open the incoming file. It needs to have software that
can interact with the imported file. Many software capabilities of this
type are built into browsers or can be added as "plug-ins."
- INTERNET (Upper case I)
- The vast collection of interconnected networks that all use the TCP/IP protocols and that evolved from the ARPANET
of the late 60’s and early 70’s. An "internet" (lower case
i) is any computers connected to each other (a network), and are not
part of the Internet unless the use TCP/IP protocols. An "intranet"
is a private network inside a company or organization that uses the
same kinds of software that you would find on the public Internet, but
that is only for internal use. An intranet may be on the Internet or
may simply be a network.
- IP Address or IP Number
- (Internet Protocol number or address). A unique number consisting
of 4 parts separated by dots, e.g. 165.113.245.2
- Every machine that is on the Internet has a unique IP address. If a machine
does not have an IP number, it is not really on the Internet. Most machines
also have one or more Domain Names that are easier for people to remember.
- ISP or Internet Service Provider
- A company that sells Internet connections via modem (examples: aol,
Mindspring - thousands
of ISPs to choose from; not easy to evaluate). Faster, more expensive
Internet connectivity is available via cable,
DSL, ISDN,
or web-TV. Often
these companies also provide Web page hosting service (free or relatively inexpensive web
pages -- the origin of many personal pages).
- JAVA
- A network-oriented programming language invented by Sun Microsystems
that is specifically designed for writing programs that can be safely
downloaded to your computer through the Internet and immediately run
without fear of viruses or other harm to our computer or files. Using
small Java programs (called "Applets"), Web pages can include functions
such as animations, calculators, and other fancy tricks. We can expect
to see a huge variety of features added to the Web using Java, since
you can write a Java program to do almost anything a regular computer
program can do, and then include that Java program in a Web page. For
more information search any of these jargon terms in the PC Webopedia.
- JAVASCRIPT
- A simple programming language developed by Netscape to enable greater
interactivity in Web pages. It shares some characteristics with JAVA but is independent. It interacts with HTML, enabling dynamic content and motion.
- KEYWORD(S)
- A word searched for in a search command. Keywords are searched in
any order. Use spaces to separate keywords in simple keyword searching.
To search keywords exactly as keyed (in the same order), see PHRASE.
- LIMITING TO A FIELD
- Requiring that a keyword or phrase appear in a specific field of documents
retrieved. Most often used to limit to the "Title" field in order to
find documents primarily about one or more keywords. (Can be used for
other fields. See the table
summarizing search tools features.)
- LINK
- The URL imbedded in another document, so that if you click on the
highlighted text or button referring to the link, you retrieve the outside
URL. If you search the field "link:", you retrieve on text in these
imbedded URLs which you do not see in the documents.
- LINK "ROT"
- Term used to describe the frustrating and frequent problem caused
by the constant changing in URLs. A Web page or search tool offers a
link and when you click on it, you get an error message (e.g., "not
available") or a page saying the site has moved to a new URL. Search
engine spiders cannot keep up with the changes. URLs change
frequently because the documents are moved to new computers, the file
structure on the computer is reorganized, or sites are discontinued.
If there is no referring link to the new URL, there is little you can
do but try to search for the same or an equivalent site from scratch.
- LISTSERVERS
- A discussion group mechanism that permits you to subscribe and receive
and participate in discussions via e-mail. For more information see
the Beyond
General Web Searching Listservers section or attend Part III of
these Web courses.
- LYNX browser
- Lynx is a "browser" program like Netscape or Internet Explorer that
can access information on World Wide Web, but without access to images,
film, or sound. It is used often from slow modems to eliminate the need
to wait to download images and other features. Lynx allows you to read
the text of any WWW document, and to select hypertext links in these
documents. You can use Lynx to go to any WWW document, to fill out forms
available on WWW, to print and save files and perform many other tasks.
For information on how to use Lynx, see Lynx
Basics.
- META-SEARCH ENGINE
- Search engines that automatically submit your keyword search to several
other search tools, and retrieve results from all their databases. Convenient
time-savers for relatively simple keyword searches (one or two keywords
or phrases in " "). See Meta-Search
Engines page for complete descriptions and examples.
- NESTING
- A term used in Boolean searching to indicate
the sequence in which operations are to be performed. Enclosing words
in parentheses identifies a group or "nest." Groups can be
within other groups. The operations will be performed from the innermost
nest to the outmost, and then from left to right.
- NEWSGROUP
- A discussion group operated through the Internet. Not to be confused
with LISTSERVERS which operate through e-mail. For more information
see the Beyond
General Web Searching Usenet Newsgroups section.
- PERSONAL PAGE
- A web page created by an individual (as opposed to someone creating
a page for an institution, business, organization, or other entity).
Often personal pages contain valid and useful opinions, links to important
resources, and significant facts. One of the greatest benefits of the
Web is the freedom it as given almost anyone to put his or her ideas
"out there." But frequently personal pages offer highly biased personal
perspectives or ironical/satirical spoofs, which must be evaluated
carefully. The presence in the page's URL of a personal name (such as
"jbarker") and a ~ or % or the word "users" or "people" or "members"
very frequently indicate a site offering personal pages.
- PACKET, PACKET JAM
- When you retrieve a document via the WWW, the document is sent in
"packets" which fit in between other messages on the telecommunications
lines, and then are reassembled when they arrive at your end. This occurs
using TCP/IP protocol. The packets may be sent via different
paths on the networks which carry the Internet. If any of these packets
gets delayed, your document cannot be reassembled and displayed. This
is called a "packet jam." You can often resolve packet jams by pressing
STOP then RELOAD. RELOAD requests a fresh copy of the document, and
it is likely to be sent without jamming.
- PDF or .pdf or pdf file
- Abbreviation for Portable Document Format, a file format developed
by Adobe Systems, that is used to capture almost any kind of document
with the formatting in the original. Viewing a PDF file requires Acrobat
Reader, which is built into most browsers and can be downloaded
free from Adobe.
- PHRASE
- More than one KEYWORD, searched exactly as keyed (all terms required
to be in documents, in the order keyed). Enclosing keywords in quotations
" " forms a phrase in AltaVista, , and some other search tools. Some
times a phrase is called a "character string."
- PLUG-IN
- An application
built into a browser or added to a browser to enable it to interact
with a special file type (such as a movie, sound file, Word document,
etc.)
- POPULARITY RANKING
of search results
- Some search engines rank the order in which
search results appear primarily by how many other sites link to each
page (a kind of popularity vote based on the assumption that other pages
would create a link to the "best" pages). Google
is the best example of this.
- +REQUIRE or -REJECT A TERM OR PHRASE
- Insert + immediately before a term (no space) to limit search to documents
containing a term. Insert - immediately before a term (no space) to
exclude documents containing a term. Can be used immediately (no space)
before the " " delimiting a phrase.
- Functions partially like basic BOOLEAN LOGIC. If + precedes more than one term,
they are required as with Boolean AND. If - is used, terms are excluded
as with Boolean AND NOT. If neither + no - is used, the default if Boolean
OR. However, full Boolean logic allows parentheses to group and sequence
logical operations, and +/- do not. Which
search engines have this?
- RANKING
RESULTS
- The order in which search results appear. Each search tool uses its
own unique algorithm. Most use "fuzzy and" combined
with factors such as how often your terms occur in documents, whether
they occur together as a phrase, and whether they are in title or how
near the top of the text. Popularity is another
ranking system.
- SCRIPT
- A script is a type of programming language that can be used to fetch
and display Web pages. There are may kinds and uses of scripts on the
Web. They can be used to create all or part of a page, and communicate
with searchable databases. Forms (boxes) and many interactive links,
which respond differently depending on what you enter, all require some
kind of script language. When you find a question marke (?) in the URL
of a page, some kind of script command was used in generating and/or
delivering that page. Most search engine spiders
are instructed not to crawl pages from scripts, although it is usually
technically possible for them to do so (see Invisible
Web for more information).
- SCROLL (DOWN, UP, LEFT, RIGHT)
- Moving up or down within a document in your screen. Use scroll bar
at right. Click on arrow down or arrow up. Drag the scroll button down
or up. Or click on the page up or page down icons at the bottom of the
bar. If you need to scroll left or right, use the scroll bar at the
bottom.
- SERVER, WEB SERVER
- A computer running that software, assigned an IP address, and connected to the Internet so that it can provide documents via the
World Wide Web. Also called HOST computer. Web servers are the closest
equivalent to what in the print world is called the "publisher" of a
print document. An important difference is that most print publishers
carefully edit the content and quality of their publications in an effort
to market them and future publications. This convention is not required
in the Web world, where anyone can be a publisher; careful evaluation
of Web pages is therefore mandatory. Also called a "Host."
- SERVER-SIDE
- Something that operates on the "server" computer (providing the Web page), as opposed
to the "client" computer (which is you or someone else viewing the Web
page). Usually it is a program or command or procedure or other application
causes dynamic pages or animation or other interaction.
- SHTML, usually seen as .shtml
- An file name extension that identifies web pages containing SSI commands.
- SITE or WEB-SITE
- This term is often used to mean "web page," but there is supposed
to be a difference. A web page is a single entity, one URL,
one file that you might find on the Web. A "site," properly
speaking, is an location or gathering or center for a bunch of related
pages linked to from that site. For example, the site for the present
tutorial is the top-level page "Internet Resources."
All of the pages associated with it branch out from there -- the web
searching tutorial and all its pages, and more. Together they make
up a "site." When we estimate there are 5 billion web pages
on the Web, we do not mean "sites." There would be far fewer
sites.
- SPIDERS
- Computer robot programs, referred to sometimes as "crawlers"
or "knowledge-bots" or "knowbots" that are used by search engines to
roam the World Wide Web via the Internet, visit sites and databases,
and keep the search engine database of web pages up to date. They obtain
new pages, update known pages, and delete obsolete ones. Their findings
are then integrated into the "home" database.
- Most large search engines operate several robots all the time. Even
so, the Web is so enormous that it can take six months for spiders to
cover it, resulting in a certain degree of "out-of-datedness" (link rot) in all the search engines. For more information,
read about
search engines.
- SPONSOR (of a Web page or site)
- Many Web pages have organizations, businesses, institutions like universities
or nonprofit foundations, or other interests which "sponsor" the page.
Frequently you can find a link titled "Sponsors" or an "About us" link
explaining who or what (if anyone) is sponsoring the page. Sometimes
the advertisers on the page (banner ads, links, buttons to sites that
sell or promote something) are "sponsors." WHY is this important?
Sponsors and the funding they provide may, or may not, influence
what can be said on the page or site -- can bias what you find, by excluding
some opposing viewpoint or causing some other imbalanced information.
The site is not bad because of sponsors, but you they should alert you
to the need to evaluate
a page or site very carefully.
- SSI commands
- SSI stands for "server-side include," a type of HTML instruction telling
a computer that serves Web pages to dynamically generate data, usually
by inserting certain variable contents into a fixed template or boilerplate
Web page. Used especially in database searches.
- STEMMING
- In keyword searching, word endings are automatically removed (lines
becomes line); searches are performed on the stem + common endings
(line or lines retrieves line, lines, line's, lines',
lining, lined). Not very common as a practice, and not always disclosed.
Can usually be avoided by placing a term in " ".
- STOP
- Button at end of Netscape's Tool Button Bar. Use to stop downloading
of a document. For more information see "Netscape
Basics."
- STOP WORDS
- In database searching, "stop words" are small and frequently occurring
words like and, or, in, of that are often ignored when keyed
as search terms. Sometimes putting them in quotes " " will allow you
to search them. Sometimes + immediately before them makes them searchable.
See Table
of Search Engine features.
- SUBJECT DIRECTORY
- An approach to Web documents by a lexicon of subject terms hierarchically
grouped. May be browsed or searched by keywords. Subject directories
are smaller than other searchable databases, because of the human involvement
required to classify documents by subject.
- SUB-SEARCHING
- Ability to search only within the results of a previous search. Enables
you to refine search results, in effect making the computer "read" the
search results for you selecting documents with terms you sub-search
on. Can function much like RESULTS RANKING. Which
search engines have this?
- TCP/IP
- (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) -- This is the suite
of protocols that defines the Internet. Originally designed for the UNIX operating
system, TCP/IP software is now available for every major kind of computer
operating system. To be truly on the Internet, your computer must have
TCP/IP software. See also IP Address.
- TELNET
- Internet service allowing one computer to log onto another, connecting
as if not remote.
- THESAURUS
- In some search tools, the terms you choose to search on can lead you
to other terms you may not have thought of. Different search tools have
different ways of presenting this information, sometimes with suggested
words you may choose among and sometimes automatically. The terms are
based on the terms in the results of your search, not on some dictionary-like
thesaurus.
- TITLE (of a document)
- The official title of a document from the "meta" field called
title. The text of this meta title field may or may not also occur in
the visible body of the document. It is what appears in the top bar
of the window when you display the document and it is the title that
appears in search engine results. The "meta" field called title is not
mandatory in HTML coding. Sometimes you retrieve a document with
"No Title" as its supposed title; this is caused when the meta-title
field is left blank.
- In Alta Vista and some other search tools, title: search also
matches on the "meta" field, which contains document descriptors not
displayed on the Web. See also LIMITING TO A FIELD.
- TRUNCATION
- In a search, the ability to enter the first part of a keyword, insert
a symbol (usually *), and accept any variant spellings or word endings,
from the occurrence of the symbol forward. (E.g., femini* retrieves
feminine, feminism, feminism, etc.) Which
search engines have this?
- URL
- Uniform Resource Locator. The unique address of any Web document.
May be keyed in Netscape's OPEN or Netscape's LOCATION / GO TO box to
retrieve a document. There is a logic the layout of a URL:
- Anatomy of a URL:
| Type
of file (could say ftp:// or telnet://) |
Domain
name (computer file is on and its location on the Internet)
|
Path
or directory on the computer to this file |
Name
of file, and its file extension (usually ending in .html or
.htm) |
| http://
|
www.lib.berkeley.edu/
|
TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/
|
FindInfo.html
|
- USENET
- Bulletinboard-like network featuring thousands of "newsgroups." For
more information see the Beyond
General Web Searching discussion group section.
- WORD VARIANTS
- Different word endings (such as -ing, -s, es, -ism, -ist,etc.)
will be retrieved only if you allow for them in your search terms. One
way to do this TRUNCATION, but few systems accept truncation.
Another way is to enter the variants either separated by BOOLEAN OR (and grouped in parentheses). In +REQUIRE/-REJECT non-Boolean systems, enter the variant
terms preceded with neither + nor -, because this will allow documents
containing any of them to retrieved.
- XHTML
- A variant of HTML. Stands for Extensible Hypertext Markup Language
is a hybrid between HTML and XML that is more universally acceptable in Web pages and
search engines than XML.
- XML
- Extensible Markup Language, a dilution for Web page use of SGML (Standard
General Markup Language), which is not readily viewable in ordinary
browsers and is difficult to apply to Web pages. XML is very useful
(among other things) for pages emerging from databases and other applications
where parts of the page are standardized and must reappear many times.
See XHTML.
Can't find the term you want?
Search almost any computer jargon in the PC
Webopedia <http://www.pcwebopedia.com/>, "the #1 online encyclopedia
and search engine dedicated to computer technology" from PC Magazine's
experts.
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