Absolute vs relative url

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Relative path in HTML

By: arielnmz
Stack Overflow: 4 June 2014

You say your website is in http://localhost/mywebsite, and let's say that your image is inside a subfolder named pictures/:

Absolute path

If you use an absolute path, / would point to the root of the site, not the root of the document: localhost in your case. That's why you need to specify your document's folder to access the pictures folder:

"/mywebsite/pictures/picture.png"

And it would be the same as:

"http://localhost/mywebsite/pictures/picture.png"

Relative path

A relative path is always relative to the root of the document, so if your html is at the same level of the directory, you'd need to start the path directly with your picture's directory name:

"pictures/picture.png"

But there are other perks with relative paths:

dot-slash (./)

Dot (.) points to the same directory and the slash (/) gives access to it:

So this:

"pictures/picture.png"

Would be the same as this:

"./pictures/picture.png"

Double-dot-slash (../)

In this case, a double dot (..) points to the upper directory and likewise, the slash (/) gives you access to it. So if you wanted to access a picture that is on a directory one level above of the current directory your document is, your URL would look like this:

"../picture.png"

You can play around with them as much as you want, a little example would be this:

Let's say you're on directory A, and you want to access directory X.

- root
   |- a
      |- A
   |- b
   |- x
      |- X

Your URL would look either:

Absolute path

"/x/X/picture.png"

Or:

Relative path

"./../x/X/picture.png"

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