diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp')
-rw-r--r-- | source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp | 22 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp b/source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp index 0cfbc9b60a..baede546f3 100644 --- a/source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp +++ b/source/text/shared/00/00000002.xhp @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ </bookmark> <comment>mw changed "Internet...".</comment> -<h1 id="hd_id3150702" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp" name="Glossary of Internet Terms">Glossary of Internet Terms</link></h1> +<h1 id="hd_id3150702" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp">Glossary of Internet Terms</link></h1> <paragraph id="par_id3155577" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">If you are a newcomer to the Internet, you will be confronted with unfamiliar terms: browser, bookmark, email, homepage, search engine, and many others. To make your first steps easier, this glossary explains some of the more important terminology you may find in the Internet, intranet, mail and news.</paragraph> </section> <sort order="asc" descendant="h2"> @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ <section id="epub"> <h2 id="hd_id151525000078771" xml-lang="en-US">EPUB</h2> <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id11525000863861" xml-lang="en-US"><variable id="epubv">EPUB is standard for electronic book files with the extension <emph>.epub</emph> that can be downloaded and read on devices like smartphones, tablets, computers, or e-readers.</variable></paragraph> - <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id981525003378764" xml-lang="en-US">EPUB is a technical standard published now by the <link href="https://www.w3.org/publishing/" name="IDPF">Publishing group of W3C</link>. EPUB is a popular format because it is open and is based on HTML.</paragraph> + <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id981525003378764" xml-lang="en-US">EPUB is a technical standard published now by the <link href="https://www.w3.org/publishing/">Publishing group of W3C</link>. EPUB is a popular format because it is open and is based on HTML.</paragraph> <paragraph role="paragraph" id="par_id291525000873676" xml-lang="en-US">An EPUB publication is delivered as a single file and is an unencrypted zipped archive containing a website. It includes HTML files, images, CSS style sheets, and other assets such as metadata, multimedia and interactivity.</paragraph> </section> @@ -63,13 +63,13 @@ <section id="frame"> <h2 id="hd_id3153146" xml-lang="en-US">Frames</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3157909" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">Frames are useful for designing the layout of <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html" name="HTML">HTML</link> pages. $[officename] uses floating frames into which you can place objects such as graphics, movie files and sound. The context menu of a frame shows the options for restoring or editing frame contents. Some of these commands are also listed in <emph>Edit - Object</emph> when the frame is selected.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3157909" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">Frames are useful for designing the layout of <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html">HTML</link> pages. $[officename] uses floating frames into which you can place objects such as graphics, movie files and sound. The context menu of a frame shows the options for restoring or editing frame contents. Some of these commands are also listed in <emph>Edit - Object</emph> when the frame is selected.</paragraph> </section> <section id="ftp"> <h2 id="hd_id3147077" xml-lang="en-US">FTP</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3147335" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">FTP stands for File Transfer Protocol and is the standard transfer protocol for files in the Internet. An FTP server is a program on a computer connected to the Internet which stores files to be transmitted with the aid of FTP. While FTP is responsible for transmitting and downloading Internet files, <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#http" name="HTTP">HTTP</link> (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) provides the connection setup and data transfer between WWW servers and clients.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3147335" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">FTP stands for File Transfer Protocol and is the standard transfer protocol for files in the Internet. An FTP server is a program on a computer connected to the Internet which stores files to be transmitted with the aid of FTP. While FTP is responsible for transmitting and downloading Internet files, <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#http">HTTP</link> (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) provides the connection setup and data transfer between WWW servers and clients.</paragraph> </section> <section id="html"> @@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ <h2 id="hd_id3145609" xml-lang="en-US">HTML</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3161459" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is a document code language, which is used as the file format for WWW documents. It is derived from <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#sgml" name="SGML">SGML</link> and integrates text, graphics, videos and sound.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3161459" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is a document code language, which is used as the file format for WWW documents. It is derived from <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#sgml">SGML</link> and integrates text, graphics, videos and sound.</paragraph> <paragraph id="par_id3154346" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">If you want to type HTML commands directly, for example when doing exercises from one of the many available HTML books, remember that HTML pages are pure text files. Save your document under the document type <emph>Text </emph>and give it the file name extension .HTML. Be sure there are no umlauts or other special characters of the extended character set. If you want to re-open this file in $[officename] and edit the HTML code, you must load it with the file type <emph>Text</emph> and not with the file type <emph>Web pages</emph>.</paragraph> <paragraph id="par_id3153960" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">There are several references on the Internet providing an introduction to the HTML language.</paragraph> </section> @@ -108,8 +108,8 @@ <h2 id="hd_id3152805" xml-lang="en-US">ImageMap</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3154685" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">An ImageMap is a reference-sensitive graphic or frame. You can click on defined areas of the graphic or frame to go to a target (<link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#url" name="URL">URL</link>), which is linked with the area. The reference areas, along with the linked URLs and corresponding text displayed when resting the mouse pointer on these areas, are defined in the <link href="text/shared/01/02220000.xhp" name="ImageMap Editor">ImageMap Editor</link>.</paragraph> -<paragraph id="par_id3153178" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">There are two different types of ImageMaps. A Client Side ImageMap is evaluated on the client computer, which loaded the graphic from the Internet, while a Server Side ImageMap is evaluated on the server computer which provides the <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html" name="HTML">HTML</link> page on the Internet. In server evaluation, clicking an ImageMap sends the relative coordinates of the cursor within the image to the server, and a dedicated program on the server responds. In the client evaluation, clicking a defined hotspot of the ImageMap activates the URL, as if it were a normal text link. The URL appears below the mouse pointer when passing across the ImageMap.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3154685" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">An ImageMap is a reference-sensitive graphic or frame. You can click on defined areas of the graphic or frame to go to a target (<link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#url">URL</link>), which is linked with the area. The reference areas, along with the linked URLs and corresponding text displayed when resting the mouse pointer on these areas, are defined in the <link href="text/shared/01/02220000.xhp">ImageMap Editor</link>.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3153178" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">There are two different types of ImageMaps. A Client Side ImageMap is evaluated on the client computer, which loaded the graphic from the Internet, while a Server Side ImageMap is evaluated on the server computer which provides the <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html">HTML</link> page on the Internet. In server evaluation, clicking an ImageMap sends the relative coordinates of the cursor within the image to the server, and a dedicated program on the server responds. In the client evaluation, clicking a defined hotspot of the ImageMap activates the URL, as if it were a normal text link. The URL appears below the mouse pointer when passing across the ImageMap.</paragraph> <paragraph id="par_id3150740" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">As ImageMaps can be used in different ways, they can be stored in different formats.</paragraph> <h2 id="hd_id3146874" xml-lang="en-US">ImageMap Formats</h2> @@ -142,8 +142,8 @@ <h2 id="hd_id3152418" xml-lang="en-US">Client Side ImageMap</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3151290" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">The area of the picture or frame where the reader can click is indicated by the appearance of the linked <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#url" name="URL">URL</link> when the mouse passes over the area. The ImageMap is stored in a layer below the picture and contains information about the referenced regions. The only disadvantage of Client Side ImageMaps is that older Web browsers cannot read them; a disadvantage that will, however, resolve itself in time.</paragraph> -<paragraph id="par_id3149664" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">When saving the ImageMap, select the file type <emph>SIP - StarView ImageMap</emph>. This saves the ImageMap directly in a format which can be applied to every active picture or frame in your document. However, if you just want to use the ImageMap on the current picture or frame, you do not have to save it in any special format. After defining the regions, simply click <emph>Apply</emph>. Nothing more is necessary. Client Side ImageMaps saved in <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html" name="HTML">HTML</link> format are inserted directly into the page in HTML code.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3151290" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">The area of the picture or frame where the reader can click is indicated by the appearance of the linked <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#url">URL</link> when the mouse passes over the area. The ImageMap is stored in a layer below the picture and contains information about the referenced regions. The only disadvantage of Client Side ImageMaps is that older Web browsers cannot read them; a disadvantage that will, however, resolve itself in time.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3149664" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">When saving the ImageMap, select the file type <emph>SIP - StarView ImageMap</emph>. This saves the ImageMap directly in a format which can be applied to every active picture or frame in your document. However, if you just want to use the ImageMap on the current picture or frame, you do not have to save it in any special format. After defining the regions, simply click <emph>Apply</emph>. Nothing more is necessary. Client Side ImageMaps saved in <link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html">HTML</link> format are inserted directly into the page in HTML code.</paragraph> </section> <section id="java"> @@ -170,7 +170,7 @@ <h2 id="hd_id3154729" xml-lang="en-US">SGML</h2> <paragraph id="par_id3147330" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US">SGML stands for "Standard Generalized Markup Language". SGML is based on the idea that documents have structural and other semantic elements that can be described without reference to how such elements should be displayed. The actual display of such a document may vary, depending on the output medium and style preferences. In structured texts, SGML not only defines structures (in the DTD = Document Type Definition) but also ensures they are consistently used.</paragraph> -<paragraph id="par_id3148747" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html" name="HTML">HTML</link> is a specialized application of SGML. This means that most Web browsers support only a limited range of SGML standards and that almost all SGML-enabled systems can produce attractive HTML pages.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3148747" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html">HTML</link> is a specialized application of SGML. This means that most Web browsers support only a limited range of SGML standards and that almost all SGML-enabled systems can produce attractive HTML pages.</paragraph> </section> <section id="search_engine"> @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ <h2 id="hd_id3150751" xml-lang="en-US">Tags</h2> -<paragraph id="par_id3156360" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html" name="HTML">HTML</link> pages contain certain structural and formatting instructions called tags. Tags are code words enclosed by brackets in the document description language HTML. Many tags contain text or hyperlink references between the opening and closing brackets. For example, titles are marked by the tags <h1> at the beginning and </h1> at the end of the title. Some tags only appear on their own such as <br> for a line break or <img ...> to link a graphic.</paragraph> +<paragraph id="par_id3156360" role="paragraph" xml-lang="en-US"><link href="text/shared/00/00000002.xhp#html">HTML</link> pages contain certain structural and formatting instructions called tags. Tags are code words enclosed by brackets in the document description language HTML. Many tags contain text or hyperlink references between the opening and closing brackets. For example, titles are marked by the tags <h1> at the beginning and </h1> at the end of the title. Some tags only appear on their own such as <br> for a line break or <img ...> to link a graphic.</paragraph> </section> <section id="url"> |