
405.6K
KAInaiku cs classu👍
Web servers and browsers communicate using standardized three‑digit codes called HTTP status codes. When you navigate to a webpage, your browser sends a request to the server: if the server locates the resource, it replies with 200 OK; if it can’t find the page at all, it replies with 404 Not Found. In essence, a 404 error simply tells you that the server is running and understood your request, but the specific page you asked for is missing—either because it never existed, was moved without updating the link, or was deleted.
These status codes are grouped by their first digit to indicate the general class of response: 1xx for informational messages, 2xx for successful requests, 3xx for redirections, 4xx for client‑side errors, and 5xx for server‑side failures. Within the 4xx range, codes become more specific—400 signals a bad request, 401 means unauthorized, 403 is forbidden, and 404 denotes “not found.” The choice of 404 is therefore not arbitrary but fits neatly into this logical scheme: any user request that can’t be fulfilled because the resource is missing falls under the 4xx client‑error umbrella, and “04” within that range was designated for “not found.”
Over the years, a colorful myth has grown that “404” refers to a Room 404 at CERN—the birthplace of the World Wide Web—where missing‑page errors were supposedly handled. In reality, this story is just internet lore. Tim Berners‑Lee and his colleagues confirm there was no such error‑handling bunker; they simply chose 404 for clarity and consistency. Today, many sites embrace the frustration of a missing page by turning their 404 screens into playful graphics, mini‑games, or helpful search tools, reminding us that even in error, the web can surprise us with creativity.
#404error #httpcode
#tamil #simplywaste
@kabil_an










