Creating hyperlinks - Learn web development 编辑

Hyperlinks are really important — they are what makes the Web a web. This article shows the syntax required to make a link, and discusses link best practices.

Prerequisites:Basic HTML familiarity, as covered in Getting started with HTML. HTML text formatting, as covered in HTML text fundamentals.
Objective:To learn how to implement a hyperlink effectively, and link multiple files together.

Hyperlinks are one of the most exciting innovations the Web has to offer. They've been a feature of the Web since the beginning, and are what makes the Web a web. Hyperlinks allow us to link documents to other documents or resources, link to specific parts of documents, or make apps available at a web address. Almost any web content can be converted to a link so that when clicked or otherwise activated the web browser goes to another web address (URL).

Note: A URL can point to HTML files, text files, images, text documents, video and audio files, or anything else that lives on the Web. If the web browser doesn't know how to display or handle the file, it will ask you if you want to open the file (in which case the duty of opening or handling the file is passed to a suitable native app on the device) or download the file (in which case you can try to deal with it later on).

For example, the BBC homepage contains many links that point not only to multiple news stories, but also different areas of the site (navigation functionality), login/registration pages (user tools), and more.

frontpage of bbc.co.uk, showing many news items, and navigation menu functionality

A basic link is created by wrapping the text or other content, see Block level links, inside an <a> element and using the href attribute, also known as a Hypertext Reference, or target, that contains the web address.

<p>I'm creating a link to
<a href="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/">the Mozilla homepage</a>.
</p>

This gives us the following result:

I'm creating a link to the Mozilla homepage.

Adding supporting information with the title attribute

Another attribute you may want to add to your links is title. The title contains additional information about the link, such as which kind of information the page contains, or things to be aware of on the web site.

<p>I'm creating a link to
<a href="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/"
   title="The best place to find more information about Mozilla's
          mission and how to contribute">the Mozilla homepage</a>.
</p>

This gives us the following result and hovering over the link displays the title as a tooltip.

I'm creating a link to the Mozilla homepage.

Note: A link title is only revealed on mouse hover, which means that people relying on keyboard controls or touchscreens to navigate web pages will have difficulty accessing title information. If a title's information is truly important to the usability of the page, then you should present it in a manner that will be accessible to all users, for example by putting it in the regular text.

Create an HTML document using your local code editor and our getting started template.

  • Inside the HTML body, add one or more paragraphs or other types of content you already know about.
  • Change some of the content into links.
  • Include title attributes.

As mentioned before, almost any content can be made into a link, even block-level elements. If you have an image you want to make into a link, use the <a> element and reference the image file with the <img> element.

<a href="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/">
  <img src="mozilla-image.png" alt="mozilla logo that links to the mozilla homepage">
</a>

Note: You'll find out more about using images on the Web in a future article.

A quick primer on URLs and paths

To fully understand link targets, you need to understand URLs and file paths. This section gives you the information you need to achieve this.

A URL, or Uniform Resource Locator is a string of text that defines where something is located on the Web. For example, Mozilla's English homepage is located at https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/.

URLs use paths to find files. Paths specify where the file you're interested in is located in the filesystem. Let's look at an example of a directory structure, see the creating-hyperlinks directory.

A simple directory structure. The parent directory is called creating-hyperlinks and contains two files called index.html and contacts.html, and two directories called projects and pdfs, which contain an index.html and a project-brief.pdf file, respectively

The root of this directory structure is called creating-hyperlinks. When working locally with a web site, you'll have one directory that contains the entire site. Inside the root, we have an index.html file and a contacts.html. In a real website, index.html would be our home page or landing page (a web page that serves as the entry point for a website or a particular section of a website.).

There are also two directories inside our root — pdfs and projects. These each have a single file inside them — a PDF (project-brief.pdf) and an index.html file, respectively. Note that you can have two index.html files in one project, as long as they're in different filesystem locations. The second index.html would perhaps be the main landing page for project-related information.

  • Same directory: If you wanted to include a hyperlink inside index.html (the top level index.html) pointing to contacts.html, you would specify the filename that you want to link to, because it's in the same directory as the current file. The URL you would use is contacts.html:

    <p>Want to contact a specific staff member?
    Find details on our <a href="contacts.html">contacts page</a>.</p>
  • Moving down into subdirectories: If you wanted to include a hyperlink inside index.html (the top level index.html) pointing to projects/index.html, you would need to go down into the projects directory before indicating the file you want to link to. This is done by specifying the directory's name, then a forward slash, then the name of the file. The URL you would use is projects/index.html:

    <p>Visit my <a href="projects/index.html">project homepage</a>.</p>
  • Moving back up into parent directories: If you wanted to include a hyperlink inside projects/index.html pointing to pdfs/project-brief.pdf, you'd have to go up a directory level, then back down into the pdf directory. To go up a directory, use two dots — .. — so the URL you would use is ../pdfs/project-brief.pdf:

    <p>A link to my <a href="../pdfs/project-brief.pdf">project brief</a>.</p>

Note: You can combine multiple instances of these features into complex URLs, if needed, for example: ../../../complex/path/to/my/file.html.

Document fragments

It's possible to link to a specific part of an HTML document, known as a document fragment, rather than just to the top of the document. To do this you first have to assign an id attribute to the element you want to link to. It normally makes sense to link to a specific heading, so this would look something like the following:

<h2 id="Mailing_address">Mailing address</h2>

Then to link to that specific id, you'd include it at the end of the URL, preceded by a hash/pound symbol (#), for example:

<p>Want to write us a letter? Use our <a href="contacts.html#Mailing_address">mailing address</a>.</p>

You can even use the document fragment reference on its own to link to another part of the current document:

<p>The <a href="#Mailing_address">company mailing address</a> can be found at the bottom of this page.</p>

Absolute versus relative URLs

Two terms you'll come across on the Web are absolute URL and relative URL:

absolute URL: Points to a location defined by its absolute location on the web, including protocol and domain name. For example, if an index.html page is uploaded to a directory called projects that sits inside the root of a web server, and the web site's domain is https://www.example.com, the page would be available at https://www.example.com/projects/index.html (or even just https://www.example.com/projects/, as most web servers just look for a landing page such as index.html to load if it isn't specified in the URL.)

An absolute URL will always point to the same location, no matter where it's used.

relative URL: Points to a location that is relative to the file you are linking from, more like what we looked at in the previous section. For example, if we wanted to link from our example file at https://www.example.com/projects/index.html to a PDF file in the same directory, the URL would just be the filename — project-brief.pdf — no extra information needed. If the PDF was available in a subdirectory inside projects called pdfs, the relative link would be pdfs/project-brief.pdf (the equivalent absolute URL would be https://www.example.com/projects/pdfs/project-brief.pdf.)

A relative URL will point to different places depending on the actual location of the file you refer from — for example if we moved our index.html file out of the projects directory and into the root of the web site (the top level, not in any directories), the pdfs/project-brief.pdf relative URL link inside it would now point to a file located at https://www.example.com/pdfs/project-brief.pdf, not a file located at https://www.example.com/projects/pdfs/project-brief.pdf.

Of course, the location of the project-brief.pdf file and pdfs folder won't suddenly change because you moved the index.html file — this would make your link point to the wrong place, so it wouldn't work if clicked on. You need to be careful!

There are some best practices to follow when writing links. Let's look at these now.

    It's easy to throw links up on your page. That's not enough. We need to make our links accessible to all readers, regardless of their current context and which tools they prefer. For example:

    • Screenreader users like jumping around from link to link on the page, and reading links out of context.
    • Search engines use link text to index target files, so it is a good idea to include keywords in your link text to effectively describe what is being linked to.
    • Visual readers skim over the page rather than reading every word, and their eyes will be drawn to page features that stand out, like links. They will find descriptive link text useful.

    Let's look at a specific example:

    Good link text: Download Firefox

    <p><a href="https://firefox.com/">
      Download Firefox
    </a></p>

    Bad link text: Click here to download Firefox

    <p><a href="https://firefox.com/">
      Click here
    </a>
    to download Firefox</p>
    

    Other tips:

    • Don't repeat the URL as part of the link text — URLs look ugly, and sound even uglier when a screen reader reads them out letter by letter.
    • Don't say "link" or "links to" in the link text — it's just noise. Screen readers tell people there's a link. Visual users will also know there's a link, because links are generally styled in a different color and underlined (this convention generally shouldn't be broken, as users are used to it).
    • Keep your link text as short as possible — this is helpful because screen readers need to interpret the entire link text.
    • Minimize instances where multiple copies of the same text are linked to different places. This can cause problems for screen reader users, if there's a list of links out of context that are labeled "click here", "click here", "click here".

    From the description above, you might think that it's a good idea to just use absolute links all the time because they don't break when a page is moved like relative links. However, you should use relative links wherever possible when linking to other locations within the same website. When you link to another website, you'll need to use an absolute link.

    • For a start, it's easier to scan your code — relative URLs are generally shorter than absolute URLs, which makes reading code much easier.
    • Second, it's more efficient to use relative URLs wherever possible. When you use an absolute URL, the browser starts by looking up the real location of the server on the Domain Name System (DNS) — see How the web works for more information. Then it goes to that server and finds the file that's being requested. With a relative URL, the browser just looks up the file that's being requested on the same server. If you use absolute URLs where relative URLs would do, you're constantly making your browser do extra work, meaning that it will perform less efficiently.

    Linking to non-HTML resources — leave clear signposts

    When linking to a resource that will be downloaded (like a PDF or Word document), streamed (like video or audio), or has another potentially unexpected effect (opens a popup window, or loads a Flash movie), you should add clear wording to reduce any confusion.

    For example:

    • If you're on a low bandwidth connection, click a link, and then a multiple megabyte download starts unexpectedly.
    • If you don't have the Flash player installed, click a link, and then suddenly get taken to a page that requires Flash.

    Let's look at some examples, to see what kind of text can be used here:

    <p><a href="https://www.example.com/large-report.pdf">
      Download the sales report (PDF, 10MB)
    </a></p>
    
    <p><a href="https://www.example.com/video-stream/" target="_blank">
      Watch the video (stream opens in separate tab, HD quality)
    </a></p>
    
    <p><a href="https://www.example.com/car-game">
      Play the car game (requires Flash)
    </a></p>

    Use the download attribute when linking to a download

    When you are linking to a resource that's to be downloaded rather than opened in the browser, you can use the download attribute to provide a default save filename. Here's an example with a download link to the latest Windows version of Firefox:

    <a href="https://download.mozilla.org/?product=firefox-latest-ssl&os=win64&lang=en-US"
       download="firefox-latest-64bit-installer.exe">
      Download Latest Firefox for Windows (64-bit) (English, US)
    </a>

    Active learning: creating a navigation menu

    For this exercise, we'd like you to link some pages together with a navigation menu to create a multi-page website. This is one common way in which a website is created — the same page structure is used on every page, including the same navigation menu, so when links are clicked it gives the impression that you are staying in the same place, and different content is being brought up.

    You'll need to make local copies of the following four pages, all in the same directory. For a complete file list, see the navigation-menu-start directory:

    You should:

    1. Add an unordered list in the indicated place on one page that includes the names of the pages to link to. A navigation menu is usually just a list of links, so this is semantically ok.
    2. Change each page name into a link to that page.
    3. Copy the navigation menu across to each page.
    4. On each page, remove just the link to that same page — it's confusing and unnecessary for a page to include a link to itself. And, the lack of a link acts a good visual reminder of which page you are currently on.

    The finished example should look similar to the following page:

    An example of a simple HTML navigation menu, with home, pictures, projects, and social menu items

    Note: If you get stuck, or aren't sure if you have got it right, you can check the navigation-menu-marked-up directory to see the correct answer.

    It's possible to create links or buttons that, when clicked, open a new outgoing email message rather than linking to a resource or page. This is done using the <a> element and the mailto: URL scheme.

    In its most basic and commonly used form, a mailto: link indicates the email address of the intended recipient. For example:

    <a href="mailto:nowhere@mozilla.org">Send email to nowhere</a>
    

    This results in a link that looks like this: Send email to nowhere.

    In fact, the email address is optional. If you omit it and your href is "mailto:", a new outgoing email window will be opened by the user's email client with no destination address. This is often useful as "Share" links that users can click to send an email to an address of their choosing.

    Specifying details

    In addition to the email address, you can provide other information. In fact, any standard mail header fields can be added to the mailto URL you provide. The most commonly used of these are "subject", "cc", and "body" (which is not a true header field, but allows you to specify a short content message for the new email). Each field and its value is specified as a query term.

    Here's an example that includes a cc, bcc, subject and body:

    <a href="mailto:nowhere@mozilla.org?cc=name2@rapidtables.com&bcc=name3@rapidtables.com&subject=The%20subject%20of%20the%20email&body=The%20body%20of%20the%20email">
      Send mail with cc, bcc, subject and body
    </a>

    Note: The values of each field must be URL-encoded, that is with non-printing characters (invisible characters like tabs, carriage returns, and page breaks) and spaces percent-escaped. Also, note the use of the question mark (?) to separate the main URL from the field values, and ampersands (&) to separate each field in the mailto: URL. This is standard URL query notation. Read The GET method to understand what URL query notation is more commonly used for.

    Here are a few other sample mailto URLs:

    Test your skills!

    You've reached the end of this article, but can you remember the most important information? You can find some further tests to verify that you've retained this information before you move on — see Test your skills: Links.

    Summary

    That's it for links, for now anyway! You'll return to links later on in the course when you start to look at styling them. Next up for HTML, we'll return to text semantics and look at some more advanced/unusual features that you'll find useful — Advanced text formatting is your next stop.

    In this module

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