With the url, you can store the RELATIVE url in the document. To open the url
you can set a base href as described in Jakes article:
http://www.codestore.info/store.nsf/0/3B7BCAAA8F3EF10280256AD0006BBD84. Not
just on the web this works, but also on intranets. For some or the other
reasons I seldom see developers use subdomains in intranets, and thus easy to
remember urls. E.g. a contract database could easily be called:
contracts.companyname.com as an internal url. The database could be called
"Contracts" and the base href could be http://contracts.companyname.com.
Thank you for your compliments Jerry.
With the url, you can store the RELATIVE url in the document. To open the url you can set a base href as described in Jakes article: http://www.codestore.info/store.nsf/0/3B7BCAAA8F3EF10280256AD0006BBD84. Not just on the web this works, but also on intranets. For some or the other reasons I seldom see developers use subdomains in intranets, and thus easy to remember urls. E.g. a contract database could easily be called: contracts.companyname.com as an internal url. The database could be called "Contracts" and the base href could be http://contracts.companyname.com.