Dreamweaver 1
Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 is a web development tool.
Dreamweaver lets you create dynamic, interactive webpages.
You can use Dreamweaver to create design elements such as text, tables, and interactive buttons.
You can save Dreamweaver files in many different file formats, including XHTML, HTML, JavaScript, CSS, or XML to name a few.
You use a browser to view your webpages on the Internet.
To view the contents of a panel in a panel group, you should click the panel name.
Panel groups can be docked on the right side of the screen or undocked by dragging the panel name.
The Dreamweaver Welcome Screen provides shortcuts for opening files and for creating new files or websites.
You can use the Property inspector to format text so that it is attractive and easy to read.
Adobe Flash is a program that is used to create animations and video content for the web.
To view the code for a particular page element, select the page element in Design view, then click the Show Code view button.
Creating a website is a complex process.
Once you complete the planning phase, you need to set up the structure of the site by creating a storyboard.
You can sketch a storyboard using a pencil and paper or using a graphics program on a computer.
After you create a root folder, you need to define your website.
A page with too many graphical elements might take a long time to load, which could cause visitors to leave your website.
Each time you make a change, such as adding a new button or image to a page, you should test the site again.
After you create the assets folder, it is a good idea to set it as the default location to store the website images.
If you create a new file using the File menu or the Welcome Screen, the filename extension will be added automatically.
The page title should reflect the page content and set the tone for the page.
The shortcut used to show panels is F4.
XHTML is the current standard language used to create webpages.
You can use the Files panel to create folders to organize and store the various files for your website, add pages to your website, and set the home page.
A website is a group of related webpages that are linked together and share a common interface and design.
The Document window is the large white area in the Dreamweaver program window where you create and edit webpages.
The Application bar is located above the Document window.
Insert panel includes eight categories of buttons displayed through a drop-down menu.
The Style Rendering toolbar contains buttons that can be used to render different media types.
The Coding toolbar contains buttons that are used when working directly in the code.
The Status bar is located below the Document window.
The left side of the status bar displays the Tag selector.
The Select tool is used for page editing.
The Hand tool is used for panning.
The Zoom tool is used for magnifying.
A view is a particular way of displaying page content.
Design view shows the page as it would appear in a browser and is primarily used for designing and creating a webpage.
Code view shows the underlying HTML code for the page, but not how it will look on a browser.
The Coding toolbar is available only in Code view.
Most information on a webpage is presented in the form of text.
Links are image or text elements on a webpage that users click to display another location on the page, another webpage on the same website, or a webpage on a different website.
Banners are images displayed across the top of the screen that can incorporate a company’s logo, contact information, and links to the other pages in the site.
Navigation bars contain multiple links that are usually organized in rows or columns.
Image maps are images that have been divided into sections, each of which contains a link.
The Search text box at the top of the Dreamweaver Help page lets the user enter a keyboard to search for a specific topic.
Publishing a website means that you transfer all the files for the site to a web server.
FTP is the process of uploading and downloading files to and from a remote site.
A(n) IP address is an assigned series of numbers, separated by periods, that designate an address on the Internet.
XHTML 1.0 Transitional is the default document type when you install Dreamweaver.
Application is not one of the menus available on the Application bar in Dreamweaver.
A(n) website is a group of related webpages that are linked together and share a common interface and design.
The Dreamweaver workspace is designed to provide the user with easy access to all the tools needed to create webpages.
XHTML is the acronym for extensible hypertext markup language.
HTML is no longer considered the standard language to create webpages.
HTML stands for hypertext markup language.
A(n) web browser is a program, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, that lets you display HTML-developed webpages.
The homepage is the first page that viewers will see when they visit a website.
The live view button, a new feature in Dreamweaver CS4, is similar to using the Preview in Browser button.
The navigation structure is the way viewers navigate from page to page in your website.
The Coding toolbar is available only in Code view and appears vertically in the Document window.
Directly below the Application bar is the document toolbar.
The Property inspector is context sensitive, which means it changes according to what is selected in the Document window.
The property insepctor, located at the bottom of the Dreamweaver window, lets you view and change the properties of a selected object.
The tag selector shows the HTML tags used at the insertion point location.
A(n) panel is a window that displays information on a particular topic or contains related commands.
Panels can be opened using the Window menu commands or the corresponding shortcut keys.
The view buttons are located on the documents toolbar.
The home page sets the look and feel of the website and directs viewers to the rest of the pages in the website.
When questions or problems arise, you can use the commands on the help menu to find the answers you need.
Rich media content is a comprehensive term that refers to attractive and engaging images, interactive elements, video, or animations.
To start planning your website, you need to create a checklist of questions and answers about the site.
Because of the public demand for “instant” information, your plan should include not just how to get the site up and running, but how to keep it current.
The current folder stores all the webpages or HTML files for the site.
In the assets folder you store all of the files that are not pages, such as images and sound files.
When you define a site, the root folder and any folders and files it contains appear in the Files panel, the panel you use to manage your website’s files and folders.
Modifying and testing pages in a website is an ongoing process.
A(n) domain name is a web address that is expressed in letters instead of numbers and usually reflects the name of the business represented by the website.
URL stands for uniform resource locator.
A(n) remote server is a web server that hosts websites and is not directly connected to the computer housing the local site.
Once a site is published to a remote server, it is called a(n) remote site.
You should definitely use the file panel to add, delete, move, or rename files and folders in a website.
The home page is called the parent page, because it is at a higher level in the web hierarchy.
When you view a webpage in a browser, its page title is displayed in the browser window title bar.
The pages linked to the parent page are called child pages.
The figure above shows a panel group being docked
When the Live View button is active, the Shows the Live View source in code view button can be toggled on or off.
When docking a panel group, the blue drop zone is a heavy blue line that appears when the panel is in the correct position to be docked.
Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 is a web development tool.
Dreamweaver lets you create dynamic, interactive webpages.
You can use Dreamweaver to create design elements such as text, tables, and interactive buttons.
You can save Dreamweaver files in many different file formats, including XHTML, HTML, JavaScript, CSS, or XML to name a few.
You use a browser to view your webpages on the Internet.
To view the contents of a panel in a panel group, you should click the panel name.
Panel groups can be docked on the right side of the screen or undocked by dragging the panel name.
The Dreamweaver Welcome Screen provides shortcuts for opening files and for creating new files or websites.
You can use the Property inspector to format text so that it is attractive and easy to read.
Adobe Flash is a program that is used to create animations and video content for the web.
To view the code for a particular page element, select the page element in Design view, then click the Show Code view button.
Creating a website is a complex process.
Once you complete the planning phase, you need to set up the structure of the site by creating a storyboard.
You can sketch a storyboard using a pencil and paper or using a graphics program on a computer.
After you create a root folder, you need to define your website.
A page with too many graphical elements might take a long time to load, which could cause visitors to leave your website.
Each time you make a change, such as adding a new button or image to a page, you should test the site again.
After you create the assets folder, it is a good idea to set it as the default location to store the website images.
If you create a new file using the File menu or the Welcome Screen, the filename extension will be added automatically.
The page title should reflect the page content and set the tone for the page.
The shortcut used to show panels is F4.
XHTML is the current standard language used to create webpages.
You can use the Files panel to create folders to organize and store the various files for your website, add pages to your website, and set the home page.
A website is a group of related webpages that are linked together and share a common interface and design.
The Document window is the large white area in the Dreamweaver program window where you create and edit webpages.
The Application bar is located above the Document window.
Insert panel includes eight categories of buttons displayed through a drop-down menu.
The Style Rendering toolbar contains buttons that can be used to render different media types.
The Coding toolbar contains buttons that are used when working directly in the code.
The Status bar is located below the Document window.
The left side of the status bar displays the Tag selector.
The Select tool is used for page editing.
The Hand tool is used for panning.
The Zoom tool is used for magnifying.
A view is a particular way of displaying page content.
Design view shows the page as it would appear in a browser and is primarily used for designing and creating a webpage.
Code view shows the underlying HTML code for the page, but not how it will look on a browser.
The Coding toolbar is available only in Code view.
Most information on a webpage is presented in the form of text.
Links are image or text elements on a webpage that users click to display another location on the page, another webpage on the same website, or a webpage on a different website.
Banners are images displayed across the top of the screen that can incorporate a company’s logo, contact information, and links to the other pages in the site.
Navigation bars contain multiple links that are usually organized in rows or columns.
Image maps are images that have been divided into sections, each of which contains a link.
The Search text box at the top of the Dreamweaver Help page lets the user enter a keyboard to search for a specific topic.
Publishing a website means that you transfer all the files for the site to a web server.
FTP is the process of uploading and downloading files to and from a remote site.
A(n) IP address is an assigned series of numbers, separated by periods, that designate an address on the Internet.
XHTML 1.0 Transitional is the default document type when you install Dreamweaver.
Application is not one of the menus available on the Application bar in Dreamweaver.
A(n) website is a group of related webpages that are linked together and share a common interface and design.
The Dreamweaver workspace is designed to provide the user with easy access to all the tools needed to create webpages.
XHTML is the acronym for extensible hypertext markup language.
HTML is no longer considered the standard language to create webpages.
HTML stands for hypertext markup language.
A(n) web browser is a program, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox, that lets you display HTML-developed webpages.
The homepage is the first page that viewers will see when they visit a website.
The live view button, a new feature in Dreamweaver CS4, is similar to using the Preview in Browser button.
The navigation structure is the way viewers navigate from page to page in your website.
The Coding toolbar is available only in Code view and appears vertically in the Document window.
Directly below the Application bar is the document toolbar.
The Property inspector is context sensitive, which means it changes according to what is selected in the Document window.
The property insepctor, located at the bottom of the Dreamweaver window, lets you view and change the properties of a selected object.
The tag selector shows the HTML tags used at the insertion point location.
A(n) panel is a window that displays information on a particular topic or contains related commands.
Panels can be opened using the Window menu commands or the corresponding shortcut keys.
The view buttons are located on the documents toolbar.
The home page sets the look and feel of the website and directs viewers to the rest of the pages in the website.
When questions or problems arise, you can use the commands on the help menu to find the answers you need.
Rich media content is a comprehensive term that refers to attractive and engaging images, interactive elements, video, or animations.
To start planning your website, you need to create a checklist of questions and answers about the site.
Because of the public demand for “instant” information, your plan should include not just how to get the site up and running, but how to keep it current.
The current folder stores all the webpages or HTML files for the site.
In the assets folder you store all of the files that are not pages, such as images and sound files.
When you define a site, the root folder and any folders and files it contains appear in the Files panel, the panel you use to manage your website’s files and folders.
Modifying and testing pages in a website is an ongoing process.
A(n) domain name is a web address that is expressed in letters instead of numbers and usually reflects the name of the business represented by the website.
URL stands for uniform resource locator.
A(n) remote server is a web server that hosts websites and is not directly connected to the computer housing the local site.
Once a site is published to a remote server, it is called a(n) remote site.
You should definitely use the file panel to add, delete, move, or rename files and folders in a website.
The home page is called the parent page, because it is at a higher level in the web hierarchy.
When you view a webpage in a browser, its page title is displayed in the browser window title bar.
The pages linked to the parent page are called child pages.
The figure above shows a panel group being docked
When the Live View button is active, the Shows the Live View source in code view button can be toggled on or off.
When docking a panel group, the blue drop zone is a heavy blue line that appears when the panel is in the correct position to be docked.