Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 Revealed CHAPTER ONE: GETTING STARTED WITH DREAMWEAVER
Chapter 1 Lessons 1.Explore the Dreamweaver workspace 2.View a Web page and use Help 3.Plan and define a Web site 4.Add a folder and pages, and set the home page 5.Create and view a site map
Getting Started with Dreamweaver What is Dreamweaver? Web design software for creating a Web page or a complex Web site What is a Web site? A group of related Web pages that are linked together and share a common interface and design
Using Dreamweaver Tools What does Dreamweaver CS3 offer? Design tools that can create dynamic and interactive web page without writing HTML code Organizational tools Site management tools Graphic site maps
Figure 1: Dreamweaver Workspace Title bar Menu bar Insert bar Document window Tag selector Status bar Select tool Hand tool Zoom tool Document toolbar Property inspector
Working with Dreamweaver Views Design view Code view Code and Design view
Starting Dreamweaver: Windows Click the Start button on the taskbar Point to All Programs, click Adobe Web Premium CS3, then click Adobe Dreamweaver CS3
Figure 3: Starting Dreamweaver CS3 Adobe Dreamweaver CS3
Fig. 4: Starting Dreamweaver (Macintosh) Click Finder in the Dock, then click Applications Click the Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 folder, then double-click the Dreamweaver CS3 application
Changing Views Click the Show Code View button Click the Show Code and Design Views button Click the Show Design View button
Figure 5: Code view for new document Show Code View button Show Code and Design View button Show Design View button Coding toolbar
Viewing Panels Expand the Application panel Click each panel tab Collapse the Application panel Study the CSS and Files panel groups Collapse the CSS panel group
Opening a Web Page Create new or open existing Web site Web page Homepage First Web page that appears when viewers go to a Web site Sets the look and feel of the Web site and directs viewers to the rest of the pages in the Web site
Basic Web Page Elements Text Hyperlinks (links) Graphics Banners Navigation bars Image map Flash button objects
Figure 7: Common Web Page Elements Images Text Navigation structure includes several sets of text links Form to fill out for free shipping Small form for signing in and checking out
Figure 8: Striped Umbrella web page elements Banner Flash button objects that link to other pages in the Web site Text links to other pages in the Web site Text Image
Using Dreamweaver Help Contents Index Search Favorites
Web Site Development Process FIGURE 10 Phases of a Web site development project
Planning a Web Site Audience needs Site goals Gathering content Budget Schedule Team Updates
Creating Storyboards FIGURE 11 The Striped Umbrella Web site storyboard
Testing the Pages Browsers and browser versions Screen sizes Connection download time Testing is a continuous process
Modifying the Pages Changes are constantly needed Test page after each change Modifying and testing is an ongoing process
Publishing the Site Transfer all the files to a Web server Web server: a computer that is connected to the Internet with an IP address A Web site must be published to the Web server before it can be viewed by others
Publishing the Site IP: Internet Protocol IP address Example: ISP: Internet Service Provider Hosts Web site FTP: File Transfer Protocol Host, host directory, login, password
Publishing the Site Create a root folder Define the Web site Set up Web server access
Fig. 12: Creating a Root Folder (Windows) Root folder FIGURE 12 Creating a root folder using Windows Explorer
Fig. 14: Site Definition Striped Umbrella Web Site Links relative to options Enable cache Web site name Local root folder
Fig. 15: Setting the Remote Access Remote info category Access list arrow
The Assets Folder Stores all non-HTML (media) files: Image files Sound files Video files Set it as the default location to store the Web site images You might want to create subfolders for each type of file
Setting the Home Page Starting point for a site map Tells Dreamweaver which page you have designated to be your home page Usually index.html (.htm), or default.html (.htm)
Adding Pages to a Web Site Once you add and name pages to your web site, you can add content to each page (text and graphics) You have a choice of several default document types you can generate when you create new HTML pages XHTML 1.0 Transitional is the default document type when you install Dreamweaver The default document type is designated in the Preferences dialog box
Fig. 16: Striped Umbrella Assets Folder (Windows) Root folder New assets folder Site list arrow8
Fig. 18: Site Definition with Assets Folder Set as Default Images Folder Default images folder text box Browse for file icon
Fig. 19: Index.html Placed in Striped_Umbrella Root Folder Broken link icon Path for file Root folder Index.html
Fig. 21: Adding New Pages to Striped Umbrella Web Site New pages added to root folder su_banner.gif in the assets folder
Creating a Site Map Keeps track of relationships between pages Graphical representation of pages Shows the folder structure View visual clues to learn about details Checked out pages
Viewing a Site Map Map view in the Files panel Show file names or page titles Edit page titles in the site map Uses a tree structure to visually represent the how pages are linked
Verifying Page Titles Search engine keywords Title in browser window Bookmark in browser
Using Site Maps for Visitors In the Web site as an informational tool PNG or JPEG Print for report or meeting BMP or PICT Create an XML site map, or a listing of the Web site links that can be made available to search engines
Site Map Layout option Page titles option button Path for home page Fig. 24: Options for Site Map Layout
Fig. 25: Expanding the Site Map Site list arrow View list arrow Expand to show local and remote sites
Chapter 1 Tasks Explore the Dreamweaver workspace View a Web page and use Help Plan and define a Web site Add a Folder and Pages, and set the home page Create and view a Site Map