Latest Article RSS Feed
SEARCH
 
Article Options
Save as HTML Save as HTML
Add as Favorites Add as Favorites
Notify on Update Notify on Update
 
Attachments
 
None
 
 
Did this help you?
Yes
No
 
Categories
Business
Travel Package from Travel Agents
World News
Jokes
Poland ends Iraq mission
BBC News
Entertainment
How to Submit to ASK.com
Link popularity
Page Rank
Google's Supplemental Index
What is Auto-Redirecting
Doorway Pages & Links
Ethical" Search Engine Optimization Exposed
Search Engine Optimization?
What is SEO Copywriting
Contraception awareness
F1 Singapore
Travel and Tourism
 
Themes
Green Blue
Red Black
Red Blue Black
Sunrise
 
Glossary
ABCDE
FGHIJ
KLMNO
PQRST
UVWXY
ZAll   
 
Share
FAQ Home Refer To a Friend Add your comments Print this Article Post Query
Other link relationships
  Posted On: 19-11-2008 539 Views

By far the most common use of a link is to retrieve another Web resource, as illustrated in the previous examples. However, authors may insert links in their documents that express other relationships between resources than simply "activate this link to visit that related resource". Links that express other types of relationships have one or more link types specified in their source anchor.

The roles of a link defined by A or LINK are specified via the rel and rev attributes.

For instance, links defined by the LINK element may describe the position of a document within a series of documents. In the following excerpt, links within the document entitled "Chapter 5" point to the previous and next chapters:

<HEAD>
...other head information...
<TITLE>Chapter 5</TITLE>
<LINK rel="prev" href="chapter4.html">
<LINK rel="next" href="chapter6.html">
</HEAD>

The link type of the first link is "prev" and that of the second is "next" (two of several recognized link types). Links specified by LINK are not rendered with the document's contents, although user agents may render them in other ways (e.g., as navigation tools).

Even if they are not used for navigation, these links may be interpreted in interesting ways. For example, a user agent that prints a series of HTML documents as a single document may use this link information as the basis of forming a coherent linear document. Further information is given below on using links for the benefit of search engines.

 
 User Comments
   
There are no comments posted for this article. Click here to become first one to post a comment.
 
 
 Related Articles
There are no related article.