How do you attach a website to your post?

  • Thread starter Thread starter einsteinian77
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
To attach a website to a post, simply enter the URL directly, and it will be recognized and activated automatically. For example, typing "https://www.physicsforums.com" will create a clickable link. Alternatively, users can format links using the code [url=www.physicsforums.com]Link[/url] to customize the display text. It's important to include "http://" in front of the URL for offsite links to function correctly. Understanding these methods allows for effective linking in posts.
einsteinian77
Messages
207
Reaction score
0
how do you attach a website to your post?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What do you mean by attaching a website?

Just enter the URL like this

https://www.physicsforums.com

and it will work automatically (it will automatically recognize it is a URL an make it active)
 
cool
 
You can also do this:

Code:
[ url = [url]www.physicsforums.com[/url] ]Link[ /url ]

to get this:

Link

You may need to put the http:// in front of the URL to go offsite.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I want to thank those members who interacted with me a couple of years ago in two Optics Forum threads. They were @Drakkith, @hutchphd, @Gleb1964, and @KAHR-Alpha. I had something I wanted the scientific community to know and slipped a new idea in against the rules. Thank you also to @berkeman for suggesting paths to meet with academia. Anyway, I finally got a paper on the same matter as discussed in those forum threads, the fat lens model, got it peer-reviewed, and IJRAP...
About 20 years ago, in my mid-30s (and with a BA in economics and a master's in business), I started taking night classes in physics hoping to eventually earn the science degree I'd always wanted but never pursued. I found physics forums and used it to ask questions I was unable to get answered from my textbooks or class lectures. Unfortunately, work and life got in the way and I never got further the freshman courses. Well, here it is 20 years later. I'm in my mid-50s now, and in a...

Similar threads

Back
Top