The text composition tool is called hypertext in which it is possible to order the information in a non-sequential way, by linking the article that is consulted at the moment and other related topics. The most common form in which hypertexts are presented are hyperlinks, those automatic linked references that, when pressed, make the computer display the textual body of a related document. Among other advantages, it allows information to be stored in large quantities, without the need to resort to a long text.
It is important to note that hypertexts are not only referred to as textual content, but other graphic forms are also included, such as drawings, images and videos; To this is added the fact that, by following hypertexts, you are browsing the web, since browsers are the tools that allow you to read them.
This ingenious system allows the user to have much more data related to the topic they are researching or in which they are interested, giving them a broad perspective on it. It had its beginning in 1945, when Vannevar Bush, with the creation of his Memex database, decided to mechanize and connect the information that was in it. In 1965, Ted Nelson arrives with Xanadu, a system in which it is possible to make a document appear in different texts. From this, alliances and new copies appear in which hypertext is better. The climax, however, occurs in 1993, when the Mosaic, a browser designed by NCSA.