I understand what the "href" attribute in the anchor tag (<a />
) is for, but what does the "h" stand for?
-
Interestingly, the HTML specification, whilst defining the href attribute's meaning, doesn't appear to say what it stands for. w3.org/TR/html401/struct/links.html#adef-href – a'r Aug 27 '10 at 16:24
Add a comment
|
HREF stands for "Hypertext Reference".
-
16That tutorial was written by Tim Berners-Lee himself. At least it has his name at the bottom. It probably doesn't get more authoritative than this. – Jörg W Mittag Aug 27 '10 at 16:51
-
3interestingly enough, I most often use it in the <link> tag to link the css document which is not hypertext at all. – Xitcod13 Apr 20 '13 at 14:55
-
the h stands for hypertext- in mathematics, hyperspace means greater than 3 dimensions. Got to love the superlative!
-
I tried looking for it but didn't get any. Can you help me with some citation which talks about this definition of hyper in mathematics. – RBT Jun 9 '17 at 10:04
-
HI @RBT looks like I miss-spoke. in mathematics, rather than 'hyper' it's 'hyperspace' that means greater than 3 dimensions. Hyper as a prefix means "over, above, beyond, exceedingly, to excess," I have edited my answer, hope it helps! Further edit, it looks like the collins dictionary does define hyperspace in ancient mathematics as being greater than 4 dimensions: collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/hyperspace but I don't have a citation. – Kerridge0 Jun 10 '17 at 11:29
The official name is supposedly (H)ypertext (REF)erence, but I always liked to think of it as Hyperlink Reference.