Steve Sostak

"Sam Bielesnig" <sambielesnig at yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:y2619s31@...
> "James O'Sullivan" <surfbjw at yahoo.com> wrote in message

> news:w2619p2b81@...:

> > The difference between the two URLs above is:

> > * What is written below the =, not what is written after =.
> > * The hyperlinked text is the text that is finally displayed on
> > the web page, not copied to the web page.
> > For clarity, if the text is written "the text that is finally
> > displayed is " on the web page (the one with the link), then it is
> > OK to display those words and nothing else.
> > "
> > If you are using an image attachment, that is not hyperlink. The
> > letters "at" in HTML actually mean "inserted" or "overwritten".
> > James
> So does that mean it always depends on the file name? It looks like
> that
> would throw a few things off.
> Yes, good point. I hadn't thought about it being case-sensitive,
> but
> see what I mean?
> Jim
> I can't figure out which site is which. I thought it was h-r-t, but it
> says
> here "The website 'http://rhine.us.gy'" of whom?
> And I see there's an obvious duplicate...
> Peter
> >> > Paul Rossen [^bbz] wrote in message
> >> > >
> >> > > You can break up URLs by the hyphen. "http://rhine.us.gy" or "rhine.us.gy"...
> >> >> will throw off links for the h-r-t. (Or "that", for that matter.)
> >> >>
> >> I'm not 100% sure, but I guess I know that "the text that is finally
> >> displayed..." links to the URL of the final display.