Difference between revisions of "top-level domain"
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+ | [[page type::article]] | ||
+ | [[thing type::domain name system concept]] | ||
+ | [[category:domain name system]] | ||
+ | </hide> | ||
==About== | ==About== | ||
A [[top-level domain]] is the last part of a [[domain name]], i.e. the part after the final '.'. | A [[top-level domain]] is the last part of a [[domain name]], i.e. the part after the final '.'. | ||
− | The primary "classic" TLDs, dating back to the creation of the hierarchical domain name system, are <code>.com</code>, <code>.org</code>, and <code>.net</code>. | + | The primary "classic" TLDs, dating back to the creation of the hierarchical domain name system, are <code>[[.com]]</code>, <code>[[.org]]</code>, and <code>[[.net]]</code>. |
{{seed}} | {{seed}} | ||
==Links== | ==Links== |
Latest revision as of 01:11, 23 November 2019
About
A top-level domain is the last part of a domain name, i.e. the part after the final '.'.
The primary "classic" TLDs, dating back to the creation of the hierarchical domain name system, are .com
, .org
, and .net
.
This page is a seed article. You can help HTYP water it: make a request to expand a given page and/or donate to help give us more writing-hours!
|
Links
- Delegated Strings: new TLDs