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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 1 Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 – Using Shared Borders and Themes
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 2 Shared Borders and Link Bars The home page in your Web site is called the parent page. Pages below the home page are child pages. A link bar component is a link bar that FrontPage maintains and updates automatically. A shared border is an area of your page that contains content and appears in every page that uses it.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 3 Adding a Page to the Navigation Structure
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 4 Renaming a Page’s Title in Navigation View Right-click the page icon in the navigation structure to open the shortcut menu, and then click Rename. Type the new page title, and then press the Enter key.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 5 Creating Shared Borders in a Web Site If necessary, position pages in the navigation structure. Click Format on the menu bar, and then click Shared Borders. Select the option button for applying the shared border to all or selected pages, select the shared border(s) to add, select the option to include navigation buttons if desired, and then click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 6 Shared Borders Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 7 The Link Bar
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 8 Deleting a Page in Navigation View Right-click the page icon in the navigation structure that you want to delete to select the page and open the shortcut menu. Click Delete to open the Delete Page dialog box. Click the Remove this page from the navigation structure option button to delete the page from only the navigation structure, or click the Delete this page from the Web option button to delete the page from the navigation structure and the Web site. Click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 9 Page Removed from Link Bar Component
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 10 Creating a New Page in Navigation View Right-click the page icon that will be the parent for the new page to select it and to open the shortcut menu. Point to New on the shortcut menu, and then click Page. Right-click the page icon for the new page to open the shortcut menu, click Rename, enter the page’s title, and then press the Enter key. FrontPage will create the Web page using the title you entered. To change the default filename, change to Folders view, click the filename of the new page to select it, type a new filename, and then press the Enter key.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 11 Disabling Shared Borders for a Single Web Page Open the page in Design view. Click Format on the menu bar, and then click Shared Borders to open that dialog box. Click the Current page option button to select it. Click the Top, Left, Right, and Bottom check boxes, as necessary, to turn off the appropriate shared borders. Click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 12 Creating a Page Banner If necessary, position the page in the site’s navigation structure. Click the location in the Web page where you want the banner to appear. Click Insert on the menu bar, and then click Page Banner. Select the Picture or Text option button to indicate the type of banner to create. Edit the text in the Page banner text box as necessary. Click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 13 Page Banner Properties Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 14 Creating a Custom Link Bar in Navigation View Change to Navigation view, and, if necessary, display the Folder List. Make sure that no page icon is selected in the navigation structure, and then click the New Custom Link Bar button on the Contents pane. Right-click the New Link Bar page icon to select it and to open the shortcut menu, type a name for the custom link bar, and then press the Enter key. Drag the filename of the first page you want to include in the custom link bar from the Folder List and position it in the custom link bar navigation structure. Repeat this step to include the appropriate pages in the custom link bar.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 15 Creating a Custom Link Bar in Navigation View Open the page in which to display the custom link bar, position the insertion point where you want to insert it, click Insert on the menu bar, and then click Navigation. Select the Bar with custom links option in the Choose a bar type list, click the Next button, choose the desired bar style, click the Next button, choose the desired orientation, and then click the Finish button. In the Link Bar Properties dialog box, click the Choose existing list arrow and select the custom link bar to use in the page. (If your Web site has only one custom link bar, then the one you created will be selected automatically.) Use the Add link, Remove link, and Modify link buttons to add new links and delete or modify existing links. To move a link’s position in the link bar, select it and then click the Move up or Move down buttons to position it in the desired location. Click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 16 Link Bar Properties Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 17 Applying a Theme to a Web Site A theme is a collection of design elements—bullets, backgrounds, table borders, fonts, and pictures—that you can apply to an entire Web site or to only one or more specific Web pages. A Web site with a theme applied to it has a consistent appearance because the formatting applied by the theme is the same in every page. Everything in the page is professionally designed to fit together.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 18 Applying a Theme to a Web Site In Design view, Folders view, or Navigation view, click Format on the menu bar, and then click Theme. Scroll the themes in the Theme task pane to find one of interest. If a page is open in Design view, clicking the theme temporarily applies the theme to the page. If desired, select the options for Vivid colors, Active graphics, and a Background picture in the Theme task pane. When you locate an appropriate theme, click the list arrow that appears when you point to the desired theme. To apply the theme to the entire Web site, click Apply as default theme in the menu. To apply the theme to the currently selected page(s) in Folders, Navigation, or Design view, click Apply to selected page(s) in the menu. Click the Yes button to apply the theme.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 19 Web Page with Theme Applied
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 20 Customizing an Existing Theme Click Format on the menu bar, and then click Theme to open the Theme task pane. Point to the theme that you want to customize, and then click the list arrow that appears. Click Customize in the menu that opens. The Customize Theme dialog box opens. Click the Colors button to customize the colors used in the theme, click the Graphics button to customize pictures and other graphic elements used in the theme, or click the Text button to customize the fonts and font styles of text elements used in the theme. When you have finished customizing the desired theme elements, click the Save button, type a name for the custom theme, click the OK button, and then click the Yes button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 21 Customize Theme Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 22 Deleting a Custom Theme from your Hard Drive If necessary, close all open Web sites in FrontPage. Click Format on the menu bar, and then click Theme to open the Theme task pane. Locate and click the custom theme in the All available themes section that you want to delete. Click Delete in the menu that opens. Click the Yes button in the message box that opens.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 23 Creating a New Theme In the Theme task pane, click the Create new theme link. Use the Colors, Graphics, and Text buttons to apply the desired formatting to different elements of the theme. Click the Save button and provide a name for the new theme, and then click the OK button. Click the OK button to close the Customize Theme dialog box.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 24 Customize Theme Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 25 Custom Theme Applied
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 26 Removing a Theme From a Page or Web Site To remove a theme from a Web page, open the page in Design view, open the Theme task pane, point to the No theme theme in the All available themes section, click the list arrow that appears, and then click Apply to selected page(s). To remove a theme from a Web site, open the Theme task pane, point to the No theme theme in the All available themes section, click the list arrow that appears, click Apply as default theme, and then click the Yes button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 27 Creating a Photo Gallery in a Page A photo gallery lets you add pictures with captions and descriptions to your Web pages. Click the desired location in which to add the photo gallery. Click Insert on the menu bar, point to Picture, and then click New Photo Gallery. Click the Add button, click Pictures from Files, and then browse to and double-click a picture file to include in the photo gallery. Click in the Caption text box, and then type the photo’s caption. Press the Tab key, and then type the photo’s description.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 28 Creating a Photo Gallery in a Page If necessary, click the Override and use custom font formatting option button to enable the options to format the caption and description using the Formatting toolbar options in the dialog box. Add more photos and their captions and descriptions to the photo gallery as necessary. Click the Layout tab, and then select a layout for the photo gallery. When you are finished adding photos, click the OK button.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 29 Photo Gallery Properties Dialog Box
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 30 Web Page with Photo Gallery
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 31 Drawings, AutoShapes, and WordArt A drawing is a canvas object that contains other objects, such as text boxes and arrows. An AutoShape is a predesigned shape, such as an arrow, bracket, square, circle, banner, star, or callout. WordArt is a text object to which you can apply a font, font size, and special effects.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 32 Creating a WordArt Object in a Page If necessary, select the existing text that you will format as a WordArt object. Click Insert on the menu bar, point to Picture, and then click WordArt. The WordArt Gallery dialog box opens. Click the WordArt style to use for your text, and then click the OK button. The Edit WordArt Text dialog box opens. Select the font, font size, and font style for your text. If necessary, type or edit the text for the WordArt object in the Text text box. Click the OK button. Use the WordArt toolbar to change the color, shape, letter height, direction, alignment, or character spacing of the WordArt object, if desired. Use the sizing handles on the WordArt object to resize the WordArt object, if desired.
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 33 Web Page with Word Art Added
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XP New Perspectives on Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003 Tutorial 4 34 Project Four Completed Good Luck H. Zamanzadeh
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