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archive:internet:web0494

Archive-name: www/faq Last-modified: 1994/03/15

                         COMP.INFOSYSTEMS.WWW FAQ
                                     

Contents

  • 1: Recent changes to the FAQ
  • 2: Information about this document
  • 3: Elementary Questions

+ 3.1: What are WWW, hypertext and hypermedia?

        + 3.2: What is a URL?
        + 3.3: How can I access the web?
             o 3.3.1: Browsers accessible by telnet
             o 3.3.2: Obtaining browsers
        + 3.4: How can I provide information to the web?
             o 3.4.1: Obtaining Servers
             o 3.4.2: Producing HTML documents
        + 3.5: How does WWW compare to gopher and WAIS?
        + 3.6: What is on the web?
        + 3.7: I want to know more.
   * 4: Advanced Questions
        + 4.1: How do I set up a clickable image map?
        + 4.2: How do I make a "link" that doesn't load a new page?
        + 4.3: Where can I learn how to create fill-out forms?
        + 4.4: How can I save an inline image to disk?
   * 5: Credits
     
                       1: RECENT CHANGES TO THE FAQ
                                     
   * 3/15/94: Information on saving inline images to disk added
     
                    2: INFORMATION ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
                                     
 This is an introduction to the World Wide Web project, describing the
 concepts, software and access methods. It is aimed at people who know
 a little about navigating the Internet, but want to know more about
 WWW specifically. If you don't think you are up to this level, try an
 introductory Internet book such as Ed Krol's "The Whole Internet" or
 "Big Dummy's Guide to the Internet". The latter is available
 electronically by anonymous FTP from ftp.eff.org in the directory
 pub/Net_info/Big_Dummy.
 
 This informational document is posted to news.answers,
 comp.infosystems.www, comp.infosystems.gopher, comp.infosystems.wais
 and alt.hypertext on the 1st and 15th of every month (please allow a
 day or two for it to propagate to your site). The latest version is
 always available on the web as
 <http://siva.cshl.org/~boutell/www_faq.html>. (see the section titled
 "What is a URL?" to understand what this means.)
 
 The most recently posted version of this document is kept on the
 news.answers archive on rtfm.mit.edu in
 /pub/usenet/news.answers/www/faq
 file://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/www/faq>. For information
 on FTP, send e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "_send
 usenet/news.answers/finding-sources_" in the body, instead of asking
 me.
 
 Thomas Boutell maintains this document. Feedback about it is to be
 sent via e-mail to boutell@netcom.com.
 
 In all cases, regard this document as out of date. Definitive
 information should be on the web, and static versions such as this
 should be considered unreliable at best. Please excuse any formatting
 inconsistencies in the posted version of this document, as it is
 automatically generated from the on-line version.
 
                          3: ELEMENTARY QUESTIONS
                                     

3.1: What are WWW, hypertext and hypermedia?

 WWW stands for "World Wide Web". The WWW project, started by CERN (the
 European Laboratory for Particle Physics), seeks to build a
 distributed hypermedia system.
 
 To access the web, you run a browser program. The browser reads
 documents, and can fetch documents from other sources. Information
 providers set up hypermedia servers which browsers can get documents
 from.
 
 The browsers can, in addition, access files by FTP, NNTP (the Internet
 news protocol), gopher and an ever-increasing range of other methods.
 On top of these, if the server has search capabilities, the browsers
 will permit searches of documents and databases.
 
 The documents that the browsers display are hypertext documents.
 Hypertext is text with pointers to other text. The browsers let you
 deal with the pointers in a transparent way -- select the pointer, and
 you are presented with the text that is pointed to.
 
 Hypermedia is a superset of hypertext -- it is any medium with
 pointers to other media. This means that browsers might not display a
 text file, but might display images or sound or animations.
 

3.2: What is a URL?

 URL stands for "Uniform Resource Locator". It is a draft standard for
 specifying an object on the Internet, such as a file or newsgroup.
 
 URLs look like this:
   * file://wuarchive.wustl.edu/mirrors/msdos/graphics/gifkit.zip
   * file://wuarchive.wustl.edu/mirrors
   * http://info.cern.ch:80/default.html
   * news:alt.hypertext
   * telnet://dra.com
     
 
 
 The first part of the URL, before the colon, specifies the access
 method. The part of the URL after the colon is interpreted specific to
 the access method. In general, two slashes after the colon indicate a
 machine name (machine:port is also valid).
 
 In this document, you will often see URLs surrounded by angle
 brackets. This is done because some newsreaders (I am told) can
 recognize them and treat them as "buttons". Do not enter the angle
 brackets when entering a URL by hand to your web browser.
 

3.3: How can I access the web?

 You have two options -- either use a browser that can be telnetted to,
 or use a browser on your machine.
 
3.3.1: BROWSERS ACCESSIBLE BY TELNET

 An up-to-date list of these is available on the Web as
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/FAQ/Bootstrap.html and should be
 regarded as an authoritative list.
 
 info.cern.ch
        No password is required. This is in Switzerland, so continental
        US users might be better off using a closer browser.
        
 ukanaix.cc.ukans.edu
        A full screen browser "Lynx" which requires a vt100 terminal.
        Log in as www.
        
 www.njit.edu
        (or telnet 128.235.163.2) Log in as www. A full-screen browser
        in New Jersey Institute of Technology. USA.
        
 vms.huji.ac.il
        (IP address 128.139.4.3). A dual-language Hebrew/English
        database, with links to the rest of the world. The line mode
        browser, plus extra features. Log in as www. Hebrew University
        of Jerusalem, Israel.
        
 sun.uakom.cs
        Slovakia. Has a slow link, only use from nearby.
        
 info.funet.fi
        (or telnet 128.214.6.102). Log in as info. Not working.
        
 fserv.kfki.hu
        Hungary. Has slow link, use from nearby. Login is as www.
        
3.3.2: OBTAINING BROWSERS

 The preferred method of access of the Web is to run a browser
 yourself. Browsers are available for many platforms, both in source
 and executable forms. Here is a list generated from the authoritative
 list, http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Clients.html.
 
  Terminal based browsers
  
 Line Mode Browser
        This program gives W3 readership to anyone with a dumb
        terminal. A general purpose information retrieval tool.
        Available by anonymous ftp from info.cern.ch in the directory
        /pub/www/src.
        
 "Lynx" full screen browser
        This is a hypertext browser for vt100s using full screen, arrow
        keys, highlighting, etc. Available by anonymous FTP from
        ftp2.cc.ukans.edu.
        
 Tom Fine's perlWWW
        A tty-based browser written in perl. Available by anonymous FTP
        from archive.cis.ohio-state.edu in the directory pub/w3browser
        as the file w3browser-0.1.shar.
        
 For VMS
        Dudu Rashty's full screen client based on VMS's SMG screen
        management routines. Available by anonymous FTP from
        vms.huji.ac.il in the directory www/www_client.
        
 NCSA Mosaic for VMS
        Browser using X11/DecWindows/Motif. Multimedia magic. Full http
        1.0 support including PUT-method forms, image maps, etc.
        Recommended if you can run it. Available by anonymous FTP from
        ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the directory Mosaic.
        
 Emacs w3-mode
        W3 browse mode for emacs. Uses multiple fonts when used with
        Lemacs or Epoch. See doc . Available by anonymous FTP from
        Cello
        Browser from Cornell LII. Available by anonymous FTP from
        fatty.law.cornell.edu in the directory /pub/LII/cello.
        
 Mosaic for Windows
        From NCSA. Available by anonymous FTP from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in
        the directory PC/Mosaic.
        
  Macintosh
  
 NOTE: all of these browsers require that you have SLIP, PPP or other
        TCP/IP networking on your PC. SLIP and PPP can be accomplished
        over phone lines, but only with the active cooperation of your
        network provider or educational institution. If you only have
        normal dialup shell access, your best option at this time is to
        run Lynx on the system you call.
        
 Mosaic for Macintosh
        From NCSA. Full featured. Available by anonymous FTP from
        ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the directory Mac/Mosaic.
        
 Samba  From CERN. Basic. Available by anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch
        in the directory /ftp/pub/www/bin as the file mac.
        
  XWindows
  
 NCSA Mosaic for X
        Browser using X11/Motif. Multimedia magic. Full http 1.0
        support including PUT-method forms, image maps, etc.
        Recommended if you can run it. Available by anonymous FTP from
        ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu in the directory Mosaic.
        
 tkWWW Browser/Editor for X11
        Browser/Editor for X11. (Beta test version.) Available for
        anonymous ftp from export.lcs.mit.edu in the directory contrib
        as tkWWW-0.10.tar.Z. (Note: this document may be up to date, so
        you may prefer to ftp to this site by hand and look for an even
        newer version rather than using the link above.)
        
 MidasWWW Browser
        From Tony Johnson. (Beta, works well.)
        
 Chimera
        Browser using Athena (doesn't require Motif). Supports forms,
        inline images, etc.; closest to Mosaic in feel of the non-Motif
        X11 browsers. Available for anonymous FTP from ftp.cs.unlv.edu
        in the directory /pub/chimera.
        
  NeXTStep
  
 Browser-Editor on the NeXT
        A browser/editor for NeXTStep. Allows wysiwyg hypertext
        editing. Requires NeXTStep 3.0. Available for anonymous FTP
        from info.cern.ch in the directory /pub/www/src.
        
  Batch Mode
  
 Batch mode browser
        A batch-mode "browser", url_get, which is available through the
        URL <http://wwwhost.cc.utexas.edu/test/zippy/url_get.html>. (I
        am not aware of an anonymous FTP site for the same package at
        present.) This package is intended for use in cron jobs and
        other settings in which fetching a page in a command-line
        fashion is useful.
        
  Unreleased or Unsupported
  
 Browser on CERNVM
        A full-screen browser for VM. Nonexistent. Use the line mode
        www. Might arrive suddenly one day.
        
 Dave Ragget's Browser
        Unreleased. For X11, (later PC?)
        
 Erwise
        X-windows early browser. Unsupported, now of historical
        interest only.
        
 NJIT's Browser
        
 Assumes a character-grid terminal with cursor addressing, and provides
 a full-screen interface to the web.
 

3.4: How can I provide information to the web?

 Information providers run programs that the browsers can obtain
 hypertext from. These programs can either be WWW servers that
 understand the HyperText Transfer Protocol HTTP (best if you are
 creating your information database from scratch), "gateway" programs
 that convert an existing information format to hypertext, or a
 non-HTTP server that WWW browsers can access -- anonymous FTP or
 gopher, for example.
 
 If you only want to provide information to local users, placing your
 information in local files is also an option. This means, however,
 that there can be no off-machine access.
 
3.4.1: OBTAINING SERVERS

 CERN's server is available for anonymous FTP from info.cern.ch and
 many other places. Use archie to search for "www" or "WWW" to find
 copies close to you. NCSA has also released a server, available for
 FTP from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
 
  See http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Daemon/Overview.html for more
 information on writing servers and gateways in general.
 
3.4.2: PRODUCING HTML DOCUMENTS

 There are several ways to produce HTML. One is to simply write it by
 hand; try the "source" button of of your browser to look at the HTML
 for an interesting page. The odds are that it'll be a great deal
 simpler than you would expect. If you're used to marking up text in
 any way (even red-pencilling it), HTML should be rather intuitive. A
 beginner's guide to HTML is available at the URL
 <http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimer.html>.
 
 Of course, most folks would still prefer to use a friendlier,
 graphical editor. One option is to use an SGML editor with the HTML
 DTD . Another, for EMACS fans, is to use EMACS and html-mode.el .
 
 In addition, there are two collections of filters for converting your
 existing documents (in TeX and other non-HTML formats) into HTML
 automatically:
 
 Rich Brandwein and Mike Sendall's List at CERN .
 
 NCSA's List of Filters and Editors , which also mentions two editors
 for MS Windows.
 
 Finally, TkWWW (listed above under XWindows browsers) supports HTML
 editing.
 

3.5: How does WWW compare to gopher and WAIS?

 While all three of these information presentation systems are
 client-server based, they differ in terms of their model of data. In
 gopher, data is either a menu, a document, an index or a telnet
 connection. In WAIS, everything is an index and everything that is
 returned from the index is a document. In WWW, everything is a
 (possibly) hypertext document which may be searchable.
 
 In practice, this means that WWW can represent the gopher (a menu is a
 list of links, a gopher document is a hypertext document without
 links, searches are the same, telnet sessions are the same) and WAIS
 (a WAIS index is a searchable page, returning a document with no
 links) data models as well as providing extra functionality.
 
 The principal difference between the three systems, it turns out, is
 deployment. WWW does not have as large a user base as gopher, mainly
 because of the small number of WWW browsers that are out. This is
 changing as WWW reaches critical mass (usage of the server at CERN
 doubles every 4 months -- twice the rate of Internet expansion).
 

3.6: What is on the web?

 Currently accessible through the web:
   * anything served through gopher
   * anything served through WAIS
   * anything on an FTP site
   * anything on Usenet
   * anything accessible through telnet
   * anything in hytelnet
   * anything in hyper-g
   * anything in techinfo
   * anything in texinfo
   * anything in the form of man pages
   * sundry hypertext documents
     
 
 
 One of the few limitations of the current networked information
 systems is that there is no simple way to find out what has changed,
 what is new, or even what is out there. As a result, a definitive list
 of the web's contents is impossible at this moment. There are,
 however, several resources which provide a great deal of information
 on new and established servers by topic. These are just two:
   * The WWW Virtual Library at the URL
     <http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/DataSources/bySubject/Overview.html
     >, a good place to find resources on a particular subject
   * What's New With NCSA Mosaic at the URL
     <http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/SDG/Software/Mosaic/Docs/whats-new.html>
     , which carries announcements of new servers on the web
     

3.7: I want to know more

 
 
 To find out more, use the web. This FAQ hopefully provides enough
 information for you to locate and install a browser on your system. If
 you have system specific questions regarding FTP, networking and the
 like, please consult newsgroups relevant to your particular hardware
 and operating system!
 
 Later you may return to this FAQ for answers to some of the advanced
 questions covered in the second section. The advanced section contains
 the most-asked technical questions in the group.
 
                           4: ADVANCED QUESTIONS
                                     

4.1: How do I set up a clickable image map?

 
 
 There are really two issues here: how to indicate in HTML that you
 want an image to be clickable, and how to configure your server to do
 something with the clicks returned by Mosaic, Chimera, and other
 clients capable of delivering them.
 
 You can read about image maps and the NCSA server at the URL
 <http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs/setup/admin/Imagemap.html>.
 

4.2: How do I make a "link" that doesn't load a new page?

 
 
 Such links are useful when a form is intended to perform some action
 on the server machine without sending new information to the client,
 or when a user has clicked in an undefined area in an image map; these
 are just two possibilities.
 
 Rob McCool of NCSA provided the following wisdom on the subject:
 

Yechezkal-Shimon Gutfreund (sg04@gte.com) wrote: : Ok, here is another bizzare request from me:

: I am currently running scripts which I "DO NOT" want to return : any visible result. That is, not text/plain, not text/HTML, not : image/gif. The entire results are the side effects of the : script and nothing should be returned to the viewer.

: It would be nice to have an internally supported null viewer : so that I could do this, more "cleanly" (ok, ok, I hear your groans).

HTTP now supports a response code of 204, which is no operation. Some browsers such as Mosaic/X 2.* support it. To use it, make your script a nph script and output an HTTP/1.0 204 header. Something like:

HTTP/1.0 204 No response Server: Myscript/NCSA httpd 1.1

 
 
 (You can learn more about nph scripts from the NCSA server
 documentation at the URL <http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/docs>.)
 Essentially they are scripts that handle their own HTTP response
 codes.
 

4.3: Where can I learn how to create fill-out forms?

 You can read about the Common Gateway Interface at the URL
 <http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu:80/cgi/>. In addition to documenting the
 standard interface for which scripts can now be written for both NCSA
 and CERN-derived servers, these pages also cover HTML forms and how to
 handle the results on the server side.
 

4.4: How can I save an inline image to disk?

 
 
 Here are two ways:
 
 1. Turn on "load to local disk" in your browser, if it has such an
 option; then reload images. You'll be prompted for filenames instead
 of seeing them on the screen. Be sure to shut it off when you're done
 with it.
 
 2. Choose "view source" and browse through the HTML source; find the
 URL for the inline image of interest to you; copy and paste it into
 the "Open URL" window. This should load it into your image viewer
 instead, where you can save it and otherwise muck about with it.
 
                                5: CREDITS
                                     
   * Thomas Boutell _boutell@netcom.com_
   * Nathan Torkington _Nathan.Torkington@vuw.ac.nz_
   * Marc Andreessen _marca@ncsa.uiuc.edu_
   * Tony Johnson

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