URL bar

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A URL bar, (also location bar, address bar), is a widget in a graphical user interface web browser that indicates the current URL; webpage address; path to a local file; or other item to be located by the browser. A new page can be viewed by typing its URL to the URL bar.

In most browsers, the URL value can often be auto-completed, either by looking up similar URLs from the history or by using keyboard shortcut for URL completion. For websites which use favicon (a small icon that represents the website), there will also be a small icon in the URL bar.

The URL bar is also used, in some web browsers, to indicate the security status of the web page. Various colors and padlock icons show if the page is encrypted and how trustworthy the communication is. In Safari (and, optionally, in Opera), the URL bar also doubles as a progress bar that indicates how much of the content of the page has been loaded.

Contents

[edit] Address bar implementations

The following sections compare address bar widgets for a few well-known web browsers.

[edit] Firefox

Image:Firefox address bar when at Wikipedia.png
Firefox's address bar when visiting Wikipedia

[edit] Opera

Image:Opera 9 address bar when at Wikipedia.png
Opera's address bar when visiting Wikipedia

[edit] Internet Explorer

Image:IE7 insecure.png
Internet Explorer 7's address bar when visiting Wikipedia
Image:IE7 secure unverified.png
Internet Explorer 7's address bar when visiting a secure site (Wikipedia secure, not displaying nonsecure items) that does not have an Extended Validation Certificate
Image:IE7 secure verified.png
Internet Explorer 7's address bar when visiting a secure site (Paypal) that does have an Extended Validation Certificate

[edit] Safari

Image:Safari 3 URL bar.png
Safari 3's address bar when visiting Wikipedia

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

ko:주소창

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