Is there a reason we include the http
/ https
protocol on the href
attribute of links?
Would it be fine to just leave it off:<
The inclusion of the “http:” or “https:” part is partly just a matter of tradition, partly a matter of actually specifying the protocol. If it is defaulted, the protocol of the current page is used; e.g., //www.example.com becomes http://www.example.com or https://www.example.com depending on the URL of the referring page. If a web page is saved on a local disk and then opened from there, it has no protocol (just the file: pseudo-protocol), so URLs like //www.example.com won’t work; so here’s one reason for including the “http:” or “https:” part.
Omitting also the “//” part is a completely different issue altogether, turning the URL to a relative URL that will be interpreted as relative to the current base URL.
The reason why www.example.com works when typed or pasted on a browser’s address line is that relative URLs would not make sense there (there is no base URL to relate to), so browser vendors decided to imply the “http://” prefix there.
My solution was to trick the browser with a redirect service, such as bit.ly and goo.gl (which will be discontinued soon), in addition to others.
When the browser realizes that the url of the shortcuts is https, it automatically releases the link image, the link is released and instead displays the http image, without showing the original link.
The annoying part is that, according to the access, it will display in the panel control of your redirector, thousands of "clicks", which is actually "display".
With this experience I'm going to look for a Wordpress plugin for redirection and create my own "redirects links". So I will have https // mysite.com /id → redirect to http link.
URLs in href are not restricted to only HTTP documents. They support all the protocols supported by browsers- ftp, mailto, file etc.
Also, you can preceed URL name with '#', to link to a html id internally in the page. You can give just the name or directory path, without a protocol, which will be taken as a relative URL.