Urdaneta, Pangasinan
WORLD WIDE WEB And
HYPERTEXT TRANSFER PROTOCOL
Prepared by:
Catherine Mendoza Casison
Jerry Bustoba Diaz
Mark Allen Madayag Fernandez
Seth Gewyn Purisima Gabot
Karen Christelle Juanitez Galvan
Christine Divina Gavina
Ryan Jeric Fernandez Sabado
Prepared to: Mr. Nicanor Pascual Jr.
Table of Contents
World Wide Web
I. Introduction
II. Body
i. What is World Wide Web ii. WWW Background iii. Structure iv. WWW Components
A. Structural Components
a) Semantic Components
v. The Fundamental concept of the WWW
A. The Hypertext concept
B. The Hypermedia concept
C. Web Browser
D. Web Server
E. Uniform Resource Locator (URL) vi. How to Access the Web vii. Creating a Web Page viii. The difference between World Wide and a Internet
III. Conclusion
IV. Reference
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
I. Introduction
i. Overviews ii. Evolution
II. Body
i. HTTP Basics ii. HTTP Methods iii. Features iv. Persistent vs. Non-Persistent Connection
v. Non-Persistent Connection vi. Persistent Connection
III. Conclusion
IV. Reference
World Wide Web
Introduction
The "Web", short for "World Wide Web" (which gives us the acronym www), is the name for one of the ways that the Internet lets people browse documents connected by hypertext links.
The concept of the Web was perfected at CERN (Centre Européen de Recherche Nucléaire) in 1991 by a group of researchers which included Tim-Berners Lee, the creator of the hyperlink, who is today considered the father of the Web.
The principle of the Web is based on using hyperlinks to navigate between documents (called "web pages") with a program called a browser. A web page is a simple text file written in a markup language (called HTML) that encodes the layout of the document, graphical elements, and links to other documents, all with the help of tags.
Besides the links which