How Do I Create a Link to Another Page or Web Site?

First, you need to know the web address, or URL, of the page that you want to link to. The easiest way to get this is to visit the page, select the URL from your browser's location bar, and copy (Ctrl-C, or "Copy" under the "Edit" menu) the URL.

Second, you need the HTML syntax for creating a hyperlink. It's a lot easier than it sounds. Here's an example. Suppose you want to write the sentence "here's a web site with some interesting information", and you want the words "web site" to link to the Center for American Progress's site. You would type the following:

here's a <a href="http://www.americanprogress.org/">web site</a> with some interesting information.

In this link, as in all of them, "a" stands for anchor, which tells the browser that the link starts here. "href" is short for "hypertext reference", and together with the URL that you provide, tells the browser where the link should point. And "/a" tells the browser where the link should end.

ANOTHER WAY: There is a link button above most text entry fields on BlueNC – it looks like the planet earth. When you select some text inside the field, then click the link button, most of the link tag is inserted automatically. It's still up to you to enter the destination URL, though. (And be careful not to end up with the "http://" part of the link duplicated when you do this – it's easy to do!)

Blue South's picture

Thanks Lance!

This is a big problem for most people. Heck I have been blogging for most of a year, and can still barely put a picture up.

Draft Brad Miller -- NC Sen ActBlue :::Liddy 44 Brad 33

Lance's picture

Then pictures are next!

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And Helms begat Reagan...


Arguably, Ronald Reagan's Helms enabled win in the 1976 NC primary was all the encouragement he needed to try again in 1980, setting the stage for the Reagan Revolution and synergistic escapades like this one...

TrueMeckDem on Myers Park Pat

"My opinion of Pat has changed over the years. I used to think he was truly a man of the people but the longer he has been mayor, the less I think of him.

As with most cities, Charlotte has three political parties: Dem, Rep, and Chamber of Commerce. Pat is definitely the puppet of the COC here. What is good for business is good for Charlotte and Pat ... very personable guy, he has gotten a bunch of Dems in these parts to vote for him but I don't trust him."

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