A subdomain is like a special address inside a bigger house, it helps people find specific rooms more easily.
Imagine your home has one big front door with the number 123 on it. That’s your main domain, like www. yourhouse. com. Now, if you want to have a special room for playing games, you might add a sign outside that says "games", so the full address becomes games. yourhouse. com. This is a subdomain.
How Subdomains Work
Think of your home as a website. The main door (www. yourhouse. com) is where visitors come in. A subdomain adds another label before the main domain, like adding a sticker to the front door that says "games" or "photos".
When someone types games. yourhouse. com, they’re not going to the main house, they're going straight to the game room.
Just like you can have different rooms in your house for different activities, websites use subdomains to separate parts of their website, making it easier for people to find exactly what they need. A subdomain is like a special address inside a bigger house, it helps people find specific rooms more easily.
Imagine your home has one big front door with the number 123 on it. That’s your main domain, like www. yourhouse. com. Now, if you want to have a special room for playing games, you might add a sign outside that says "games", so the full address becomes games. yourhouse. com. This is a subdomain.
Examples
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See also
- How Does Understanding How Websites Work: Key Components and Types Explained Work?
- What are domains?
- How Does Routing Table Explained Work?
- How Does IP Addresses and the Internet - Computerphile Work?
- How The Internet Changed Everything?