URI Scheme
Computer Networking, Uniform Resource Identifier, Hypermedia
Omniscriptum (Publisher)
Published on 19. March 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
76 pages
978-613-1-37516-3 (ISBN)
Description
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles
available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In the field of
computer networking, a URI scheme is the top level of the Uniform
Resource Identifier (URI) naming structure. All URIs and absolute URI
references are formed with a scheme name, followed by a colon character
(":"), and the remainder of the URI called (in the outdated RFCs 1738
and 2396, but not the current STD 66/RFC 3986) the scheme-specific part.
The syntax and semantics of the scheme-specific part are left largely to
the specifications governing individual schemes, subject to certain
constraints such as reserved characters and how to "escape" them. URI
schemes are sometimes erroneously referred to as "protocols", or
specifically as URI protocols or URL protocols, since most were
originally designed to be used with a particular protocol, and often
have the same name. The http scheme, for instance, is generally used for
interacting with Web resources using HyperText Transfer Protocol. Today,
URIs with that scheme are also used for other purposes, such as RDF
resource identifiers and XML namespaces, that are not related to the
protocol.
More details
Language
English
Dimensions
Height: 220 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 5 mm
Weight
131 gr
ISBN-13
978-613-1-37516-3 (9786131375163)
Schweitzer Classification