URI vs URL: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 16:49, 14 March 2026

This article explains the difference between a **URI (Uniform Resource Identifier)** and a **URL (Uniform Resource Locator)** — two terms that are often confused, misused, or presented as if they are fundamentally different. In reality: **a URL *is* a type of URI**. The URL adds one key piece: a **protocol/scheme that tells you how to access the resource**.

Context

- “URI vs URL” has been debated for decades — often unnecessarily. - The confusion mostly comes from evolving terminology. - Developers frequently say “URL” when they mean URI.

Core Concepts

What is a URI?

A URI identifies a resource by name, location, or both. Examples:

What is a URL?

A URL is a URI that tells you how to locate the resource. Example:

URI vs URL vs URN

Term Meaning Locates? Example
URI Any identifier Maybe mailto:dex@pirho.net
URL URI with protocol Yes https://pirho.net
URN Permanent name No urn:isbn:1234567890

Practical Application

APIs

Endpoints are URIs, not necessarily URLs.

Browsers

Browsers resolve URLs but internally use URI references.

Common Pitfalls

- Thinking “URL” and “URI” are interchangeable. - Forgetting URLs require a scheme.

Design & Architecture Considerations

  • Use URI terminology for API design.
  • Use URL in user-facing documentation.

Troubleshooting & Diagnostics

Example URL breakdown:

https://pirho.net/articles/uri?draft=true#definitions

Related Topics

References

  • RFC 3986 — Uniform Resource Identifier