Λεξικό για την Κατασκευή Ιστοσελίδων

Το Λεξικό για την Κατασκευή Ιστοσελίδων περιλαμβάνει όρους που χρησιμοποιούνται (ελληνικά και αγγλικά)


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H

hypertext

A computer-based text retrieval system that enables a user to access particular locations in webpages or other electronic documents by clicking on links within specific webpages or documents. (from www.dictionary.com ) Το υπερκείμενο επιτρέπει τη μη γραμμική σύνδεση πληροφοριών και είναι ο λόγος ύπαρξης του Διαδικτύου.

I

Internet Διαδίκτυο

History of the Internet (from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Wide_Web)

The idea of a computer network intended to allow general communication between users of various computers has developed through a large number of stages. The melting pot of developments brought together the network of networks[1] that we know as the Internet. This included both technological developments, as well as the merging together of existing network infrastructure and Telecommunication systems.

The earliest versions of these ideas appeared in the late 1950s. Practical implementations of the concepts began during the late 1960s and 1970s. By the 1980s, technologies we would now recognise as the basis of the modern Internet began to spread over the globe. In the 1990s the introduction of the World Wide Web saw use become commonplace.

Δ

διαδίκτυο (www:: world wide web)

The World Wide Web ("WWW" or simply the "Web") is a global information space which people can read and write via computers connected to the Internet. The term is often mistakenly used as a synonym for the Internet itself, but the Web is actually a service that operates over the Internet, just like e-mail. ( from http://en.wikipedia.org/)

The World Wide Web is the combination of four basic ideas:

  • hypertext, that is the ability, in a computer environment, to move from one part of a document to another or from one document to another through internal connections among these documents (called "hyperlinks");
  • resource identifiers, that is the ability, on a computer network, to locate a particular resource (computer, document or other resource) on the network through a unique identifier;
  • markup language, in which characters or codes embedded in text indicate to a computer how to print or display the text, e.g. as in italics or bold type or font.