yardımlı metin

listen to the pronunciation of yardımlı metin
Turkish - English
hypertext
Digital text in which the reader may navigate related information through embedded hyperlinks

Did Nelson realize at the time that he had met Xanadu's second parent? Probably not. The inventor scattered his ideas as widely as possible, with little care about where they landed. But as the decades passed, it would be Gregory who oversaw the attempt to transform Xanadu into a real product. He never received much public notice, but through all the project's painful deaths and rebirths, Gregory's commitment to Nelson's dream of a universal hypertext library never waned. If Ted Nelson is Xanadu's profligate father, Roger Gregory is Xanadu's devoted mother, and in retrospect, his role appears to have been intertwined with a terrible element of sacrifice.

A hypertext document

A hypertext system, then, is a memex-like device for creating and manipulating hypertexts, both for on-line browsing, and for reducing selected portions of such texts to . .

{i} document which leads a user to another site or to another part of the same document when the user clicks on a certain place in the document (Computers)
A hypertext document is one that includes links (connections) to other documents In concept this is similar to including footnotes in a printed document However, in a hypertext document you can switch to the connected item by clicking on a "hot spot," usually indicated by a different color from the surrounding text In the World Wide Web links can lead to other documents on the same data server, or might take you to other servers
Text in a document that contains a link to other text You can click on hypertext to jump to the text designated in the link Hypertext is used in Windows help programs and CD encyclopedias to jump to related references elsewhere within the same document Using HTTP, hypertext can link to any Web document in the world
Generally, any text that contains links to other documents - words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed See also: HTML, HTTP
Generally, any text that contains “links” to other documents—words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
Text that contains links to other documents Words or phrases in the document can be chosen by a reader, which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
machine-readable text that is not sequential but is organized so that related items of information are connected; "Let me introduce the word hypertext to mean a body of written or pictorial material interconnected in such a complex way that it could notconveniently be presented or represented on paper"--Ted Nelson
A way of presenting information in which text, sounds, images, and actions are linked together in a way that allows you to move between them in whatever order you choose Hypertext usually refers to any text available on the World Wide Web that contains links to other documents
Any text that contains links to other documents - words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
Generally, any text that contains "links" to other documents - words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by the user and which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
Text that can be clicked by a user to cause another document or web page to be retrieved and displayed
An electronic document that is linked to other documents through hyperlinks
In computing, hypertext is a way of connecting pieces of text so that you can go quickly and directly from one to another. a way of writing computer documents that makes it possible to move from one document to another by clicking on words or pictures, especially on the Internet. or hyperlink Linking of related information by electronic connections in order to allow a user easy access between them. Conceptualized by Vannevar Bush (1945) and invented by Douglas Engelbart in the 1960s, hypertext is a feature of some computer programs that allows the user to select a word and receive additional information, such as a definition or related material. In Internet browsers, hypertext links (hotlinks) are usually denoted by highlighting a word or phrase with a different font or colour. Hypertext links create a branching or network structure that permits direct, unmediated jumps to related information. Hypertext has been used most successfully as an essential feature of the World Wide Web (see HTML; HTTP). Hyperlinks may also involve objects other than text (e.g., selecting a small picture may provide a link to a larger version of the same picture)
Generally, any text that contains links to other documents Words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which cause another document (usually a Web page) to be retrieved and displayed A link doesn't just have to be text, however--pictures and icons can also be "clickable " Back to Top
Text that allows embedded "links" to other locations Nearly all WorldWide Web documents contain hypertext The hypertext links to other words in this document are shown in a different color
Generally, any text that contains "links" to other documents - words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and which cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
Any text that that can be chosen by a reader and which causes another document to be retrieved and displayed
Generally, any text that contains "links" to other documents - words or phrases in the document that can be chosen by a reader and that cause another document to be retrieved and displayed
yardımlı metin
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