When you’re working in Design or Split view, you can use visual aids in Dreamweaver to make it easier to work with page elements, such as borders, backgrounds, and outlines that are norm
Trang 1When you’re working in Design or Split view, you can use visual aids in Dreamweaver to make it easier to work with page elements, such as borders, backgrounds, and outlines that are normally invisible
Sometimes it’s hard to adjust elements without being able to see the edge For example, the Table Borders and Frame Borders commands on the Visual Aids submenu on the View menu make it easier to view and change the borders in tables and frames on a page You can show or hide all the visual aids at once or select each item individually The Visual Aids submenu highlights the menu icon or displays a checkmark when a visual aid is turned on
Using Visual Aids
Show or Hide Visual Aids
◆ All Click the View menu, point
to Visual Aids, and then click
Hide All.
TIMESAVER Press Ctrl+Shift+I
to show or hide all visual aids
◆ Individual Click the View menu,
point to Visual Aids, and then click
each item you want to show or
hide
◆ CSS Layout Backgrounds
◆ CSS Layout Box Model
◆ CSS Layout Outlines
◆ AP Element Outlines
◆ Table Widths
◆ Table Borders
◆ Frame Borders
◆ Image Maps
◆ Invisible Elements
Click to hide all visual aids
Click to show or hide individual visual aids
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Dreamweaver uses many styles of elements to create a Web page
Some of the elements are invisible, such as text and images, and some are not, such as anchors and line breaks The invisible elements in a Web page are important to the structure and functionality of a page
However, they are not always necessary to view and make changes to
a Web page unless you specifically want to work with an invisible ele-ment You can use the Preferences dialog box to select the invisible elements you want to show or hide After you set your invisible element preferences, you can use the Visual Aids submenu on the View menu to show (enable) or hide (disable) the Invisible Elements command
Showing invisible elements might slightly change the layout of a page, however, it’s only temporary until you hide them
Working with
Invisible Elements
Set Invisible Element
Preferences
Click the Dreamweaver (Mac) or
Edit (Win) menu, and then click
Preferences.
Click the Invisible Elements
category
Select or clear the check box
options you want to show or hide:
◆ Named Anchors Displays an
icon to mark anchor locations
◆ Scripts Displays an icon to
mark JavaScript or VBScript
◆ Comments Displays an icon to
mark the location of comments
◆ Line Breaks Displays an icon
to mark the location of line
breaks <br>
◆ Client-Side Image Maps.
Displays an icon to mark the
location of client-side image
maps
◆ Embedded Styles Displays an
icon to mark the location of
CSS styles embedded in the
body section of a document
◆ Hidden Form Fields Displays
an icon to mark the location of
form fields that are set to
“hidden.”
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From the Library of Wow! eBook
Trang 3◆ Form Delimiter Displays the
border of a form to make it
easier to insert form fields
◆ Anchor Points For AP
Elements Displays an icon to
mark the location of code
defining an AP Element, which
is an element with an absolute
position assigned to it AP
elements are not invisible, just
the code defining it
◆ Anchor Points For Aligned
Elements Displays an icon to
mark the location of HTML
code for elements that work
with the align option, such as
images, tables, ActiveX objects,
plug-ins, and applets
◆ Visual Server Markup Tags.
Displays the location of visual
server markup tags, such as
Active Server Pages tags and
ColdFusion tags, whose content
cannot be displayed
◆ Nonvisual Server Markup Tags.
Displays the location of
nonvisual server markup tags,
such as Active Server Pages
tags and ColdFusion tags,
whose content cannot be
displayed
◆ CSS Display: None Displays an
icon to mark the location of
hidden content using the
display:none property
◆ Show Dynamic Text As.
Displays any dynamic text on
your page in the format of
{Recordset:Field} by default
◆ Server-Side Includes Displays
the content of each server-side
include file from the Web
server
Click OK.
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Before you can work with an element, such as text or an image, you need to select the element first If an element is invisible, you need to make it visible before you can select it You can select an element in Design view by simply clicking the element If you want to select the complete tag associated with an element, you can use the tag selector
The tag selector appears at the bottom of the Document window on the Status bar The tag selector shows the tags within the current selection
or insertion point The leftmost tag in the tag selector is the outermost tag in the selection Simply select the code or place the insertion point where you want to select a tag, and click the tag you want to select in the tag selector
Selecting Elements
Select Elements
◆ Visible Element In Design view,
click the element or drag across it
◆ Invisible Element Click the View
menu, point to Visual Aids, and
then click Invisible Elements You
can select the invisible elements
as visible ones
◆ Tags Select the code or place the
insertion point where you want to
select a tag, and then click the tag
you want in the tag selector
Table cell selected
Tags selected
From the Library of Wow! eBook
Trang 5Working with Web Page Text
Introduction
Now that you've created a Web page, it's time to throw in
some text to get the message across Text comes in many
forms: from headings and paragraphs, bulleted points, and
body text written especially for the Web Your job as a Web
designer is to make it all flow together in a logical, attractive,
understandable fashion
Many designers who come from the professional printing
industry are surprised at the lack of typographic control on a
normal Web page Specific fonts are suggested, not specified,
sizes are relative, and line spacing seems to be imaginary
Designers of print-to-paper are used to exacting standards
and control For example, tell a print designer that although
he specified the Benguiat font to be used in his brochure
design, the readers might wind up with Times New Roman,
or Garamond That designer would be out the door and
look-ing for a new print shop Yet, that's what sometimes happens
on the Internet
Some Web designers, to achieve the desired look,
respond by converting their text into graphics, but don't For
one reason, text converted into graphics bloats the size of the
page and increases download times; another reason is that
text converted to graphics is not searchable
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are more and more
becom-ing a real option and give the Web designer almost as much
control as the print designer
In this chapter we're going to talk about text as it relates
to standard Web page construction: adding text to a page,
modifying text, using text to attract attention, formatting text,
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What You’ll Do
Add Text to Web Pages Import Tabular Data Import Content from Microsoft Documents
Insert Special Characters and the Date
Select Text Copy and Paste Text Set Copy/Paste Preferences Modify Font Combinations Format Characters and Paragraph Text Control Line Spacing
Insert Horizontal Rules Create Ordered and Unordered Lists Create Definition Lists
Modify Lists Apply and Create Text Styles Find and Replace Text or Code Check Spelling
Use Undo and Redo Set Font Preferences
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Working with text is not just about placing letters on a page; it's about using text as a page design element and it's also about readability
What's the use of adding text to a Web page if it's too small to read, or the font is not one that renders well on a pixel-based monitor?
Remember, there are fonts that look good on paper, and fonts that look good on a computer monitor Dreamweaver is going to help us out with the formatting part of the equation; it's up to you to make the words sound good The cool thing about working with text in Dreamweaver is the choices you have; for example, you can choose to type text directly into a page, or copy and paste the text from a word processing docu-ment Text is added to the Web page in several ways: you can open up
a blank Web page and just start typing; however, you have very little control over text formatting Another way is to create a table, and insert the text into the individual table cells This gives you the ability to con-trol your margins and paragraph formatting The newest way is through the use of individual layers Layers not only give you the ability to con-trol your paragraph formatting; in addition, they give you the ability to move the layers, even stacking one layer on another
Adding Text to Web
Pages
Add Text to a Web Page
Open the Web page you want to
add text
In this example we use a Web
page with an inserted table
Click with your mouse in the table
cell that you want to add text
Begin typing the text that you want
to add
Press the Enter (Win) or Return
(Mac) key to start a new
paragraph
Dreamweaver adds text based on
its default formatting parameters,
and automatically wraps the text
when it comes to the end of the
table cell
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From the Library of Wow! eBook
Trang 7If you have data in tabular form, such as a database or spreadsheet, you can import the data as delimited text files Before you can import the data, you need to export or save the data in the database or spreadsheet as a delimited text file, which is a file format with the data separated by tabs, commas, colons, or semicolons From here, you can import the data file to your page in Dreamweaver and format it as a data table When you import the data, you can specify the table layout and formatting options you want
Importing Tabular
Data
Import Tabular Data
Open the Web page you want to
import content
Click in the location where you
want to insert content
Click the File menu, point to
Import, and then click Tabular
Data.
Click Browse, navigate to the
location with the file you want to
import, select the delimited file,
and then click Open.
Click the Delimiter list arrow, and
then select the delimiter type you
used when you exported or saved
the file
Click the Fit To Data or Set To
option If you selected the Set to
option, enter a specific width or a
percentage of the browsers
window width you want (in pixels)
Enter the cell padding and cell
spacing you want (in pixels)
Click the Format Top Row list
arrow, select the formatting option
you want, and then enter the table
border width you want (in pixels)
Click OK.
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If you're a Windows user you can import Microsoft documents directly onto your Web pages You can use the Import submenu on the File menu to import content from Microsoft Word or Microsoft Excel docu-ments into your Web pages If you want to create a link to a Microsoft Word or Excel document, you can simply drag the document file to where you want the link in your page If the document file is not located inside the local root folder, Dreamweaver prompts you to copy the file
to the root to maintain proper site organization In addition, when you upload your page to your Web server, you need to make sure you also upload the Microsoft Word or Excel document, so the link works properly
Importing Content
from Microsoft
Documents
Import Content from Microsoft
Word or Excel
Open the Web page you want to
import Microsoft content
Click in the location where you
want to insert content
Click the File menu, point to
Import, and then click Word
Document or Excel Document.
Navigate to the location with the
Microsoft document you want to
import
Select the document
Click Open.
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See Also
See “Cleaning Up Word HTML” on
page 464 for information on cleaning
HTML in a Word document
From the Library of Wow! eBook