Difference between revisions of "Hyperlink"

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  (Source, Target)
  (Source, Target)
  (URL,    Data Element)
  (URL string,    Data Element) where URL stands for Universal Resource Locator or Indicator
  (<nowiki>http://xlp.pub/</nowiki>, [[Main Page]])
  (<nowiki>http://xlp.pub/</nowiki>, [[Main Page]])



Revision as of 03:46, 26 July 2021

Hyperlink is simply a tuple, pairing a source and a target data component. Usually one may see the following data element examples:

(Source, Target)
(URL string,    Data Element)  where URL stands for Universal Resource Locator or Indicator
(http://xlp.pub/, Main Page)

Hyperlink is a powerful idea originally created by pioneers, such as Ted Nelson. To learn more about Hyperlinks, the following content maybe relevant for curious minds.

  • For history of hyperlinked multimedia, please see [1] [2] [3]

To learn more about HyperText, Ted Nelson has a short clip on the movie, Lo and Behold.

{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bqx6li5dbEY%7C%7C%7C%7C%7C}}

The Mathematics of Links

To learn more about Hyperlinks, one may refer to Category Theory, which provides an arrow chasing reasoning mechanism to perform rigorous manipulation of links.


A concrete example about linguistic sentence parsing in Category Theory can be seen here:

{{#ev:youtube|UsHL-thk6J0|||||start=532&end=700}}


Hyperlinks as Sheaves

To think of hyperlink as a kind of computable data structure, the best approximation can be thought of as sheaves.

The following video provides an interesting explanation of how to enumerate hyperlinks as binary products.

{{#ev:youtube|fJSmC_sqRvc|||||}}

References