HTML: Image won't display?

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遥遥无期
遥遥无期 2020-12-11 16:58

I\'m kind of new to HTML. I\'m trying to display an image on my website but for some reason, it just shows a blue box with a question mark in it. I\'ve looked everywhere on

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  • 2020-12-11 17:29

    Lets look at ways to reference the image.

    Back a directory

    ../
    

    Folder in a directory:

     foldername/
    

    File in a directory

     imagename.jpg
    

    Now, lets combine them with the addresses you specified.

     /Resources/views/Default/index.html
     /Resources/public/images/iwojimaflag.jpg
    

    The first common directory referenced from the html file is three back:

     ../../../
    

    It is in within two folders in that:

     ../../../public/images/
    

    And you've reached the image:

     ../../../public/images/iwojimaflag.jpg
    

    Note: This is assuming you are accessing a page at domain.com/Resources/views/Default/index.html as you specified in your comment.

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  • 2020-12-11 17:30

    I confess to not having read the whole thread. However when I faced a similar issue I found that checking carefully the case of the file name and correcting that in the HTML reference fixed a similar issue. So local preview on Windows worked but when I published to my server (hosted Linux) I had to make sure "mugshot.jpg" was changed to "mugshot.JPG". Part of the problem is the defaults in Windows hiding full file names behind file type indications.

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  • 2020-12-11 17:31

    Here are the most common reasons

    • Incorrect file paths

    • File names are misspelled

    • Wrong file extension

    • Files are missing

    • The read permission has not been set for the image(s)

    Note: On *nix systems, consider using the following command to add read permission for an image:

    chmod o+r imagedirectoryAddress/imageName.extension
    

    or this command to add read permission for all images:

    chmod o+r imagedirectoryAddress/*.extension
    

    If you need more information, refer to this post.

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  • 2020-12-11 17:34

    I found that skipping the quotation marks "" around the file and location name displayed the image... I am doing this on MacBook....

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  • 2020-12-11 17:49

    img {
      width: 200px;
    }
    <img src="https://image.ibb.co/gmmneK/children_593313_340.jpg"/>
    
    <img src="https://image.ibb.co/e0RLzK/entrepreneur_1340649_340.jpg"/>
    
    <img src="https://image.ibb.co/cks4Rz/typing_849806_340.jpg"/>

    please see the above code.

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  • 2020-12-11 17:52

    Just to expand niko's answer:

    You can reference any image via its URL. No matter where it is, as long as it's accesible you can use it as the src. Example:

    Relative location:

    <img src="images/image.png">
    

    The image is sought relative to the document's location. If your document is at http://example.com/site/document.html, then your images folder should be on the same directory where your document.html file is.

    Absolute location:

    <img src="/site/images/image.png">
    <img src="http://example.com/site/images/image.png">
    

    or

    <img src="http://another-example.com/images/image.png">
    

    In this case, your image will be sought from the document site's root, so, if your document.html is at http://example.com/site/document.html, the root would be at http://example.com/ (or it's respective directory on the server's filesystem, commonly www/). The first two examples are the same, since both point to the same host, Think of the first / as an alias for your server's root. In the second case, the image is located in another host, so you'd have to specify the complete URL of the image.

    Regarding /, . and ..:

    The / symbol will always return the root of a filesystem or site.

    The single point ./ points to the same directory where you are.

    And the double point ../ will point to the upper directory, or the one that contains the actual working directory.

    So you can build relative routes using them.

    Examples given the route http://example.com/dir/one/two/three/ and your calling document being inside three/:

    "./pictures/image.png"
    

    or just

    "pictures/image.png"
    

    Will try to find a directory named pictures inside http://example.com/dir/one/two/three/.

    "../pictures/image.png"
    

    Will try to find a directory named pictures inside http://example.com/dir/one/two/.

    "/pictures/image.png"
    

    Will try to find a directory named pictures directly at / or example.com (which are the same), on the same level as directory.

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