Link text This displays like this: Link text.
You can also turn an image into a link:.
The user will see the image wikihow_logo.
png, and can click the image to visit https://www.
wikihow.
com/.
Let’s say you’re editing the page http://example. edu/about/author. html. To link to the page http://example. edu/about/family. html, just type the file name:Link text
To link to a page in a subfolder, include the new file path. For example, if you’re on the page http://example. edu/about/author. html and want to link to http://example. edu/about/pets/dog. jpg, you can skip everything up to “about:"Link text To link to a page in a different branch of the site, use “. . /” to move up to a higher folder. For example, to link from /about/author. html to http://example. edu/writing/books. html, type:Link text
Anchor text. This will display as normal text, since it is the destination of a link and not a link itself. You can replace “anchorname” with any name, as long as you don’t use the same name twice on one page.
For example, to link to the anchor on the page http://example. edu/vacation. html, type:Link text. . You can add this to absolute or relative links (see instructions in separate method).
Header Text
Link to this by adding #topheader to the URL.Paragraph text
Link to this by adding #introparagraph to the URL.