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Microsoft FrontPage 2003 Illustrated Complete Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance
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Unit C 2Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Understand Navigation view Add existing pages to the navigation structure Add blank pages to the navigation structure Turn on shared borders Objectives
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Unit C 3Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Objectives Change link bar properties Change the content of a shared border Apply a theme to a Web site Customize a theme
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Unit C 4Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Hyperlinks can open: –Internal links, which are locations in the same Web page –External links, which are locations in another Web page or Web site Shared borders are areas that appear in every page in a Web site that use them and using them is an easy way to create the hyperlinks that connect the pages in a Web site
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Unit C 5Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance (cont.) You can enhance your Web site’s appearance by applying a theme, which is a collection of coordinated graphics, colors, and fonts applied to individual pages or all pages in a Web site
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Unit C 6Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Understanding Navigation View Navigation view shows a Web site’s navigation structure FrontPage automatically adds the home page to the navigation structure If you use a template, FrontPage might add other pages created by the template to the navigation structure When you add new pages, you must manually add them to the site’s navigation structure in Navigation view
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Unit C 7Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Understanding Navigation View (cont.) When you add pages below the home page, the home page becomes the parent page and the pages below it become child pages After you add pages to the navigation structure, you can move, rename, delete, and open pages Renaming a page changes its title, which appears on the page icon When you delete a page from the navigation structure, you can delete the page from the navigation structure or from the Web site
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Unit C 8Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Understanding Navigation View (cont.) Double-clicking a page icon in the navigation structure opens the page in Design view Some Web sites include pages that don’t need to be included in the navigation structure You cannot add files that are not Web pages to the navigation structure Position pages in the navigation structure to impact the appearance of some FrontPage components in a Web site
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Unit C 9Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Understanding Navigation View (cont.) Sample navigation structure
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Unit C 10Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Adding Existing Pages to the Navigation Structure You can use Navigation view to add an existing page in a Web site to the navigation structure by dragging its filename from the Folder List and dropping it in the correct position in the navigation structure You can insert components that are dependent on the navigation structure and rearrange the pages in the navigation structure at any time
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Unit C 11Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Adding Existing Pages to the Navigation Structure (cont.) The hyperlinks that appear in the link bar in a shared border are called navigation buttons, even though a navigation button might appear as regular text instead of as a button
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Unit C 12Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Adding Existing Pages to the Navigation Structure (cont.) Adding a child page of the home page
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Unit C 13Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Adding Blank Pages to the Navigation Structure You can use Page, Folders, or Navigation view to add a new page to a Web site When you create a new page in Navigation view, you can create the new page in the site and add it to the navigation structure at the same time If you add a page in Page or Folders view, you must switch to Navigation view to add the page to the navigation structure
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Unit C 14Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Adding Blank Pages to the Navigation Structure (cont.) New Page in Folders view
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Unit C 15Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Turning on Shared Borders A shared border is an area that appears in every page in a Web site that uses it Shared borders can contain a link bar or a page banner A link bar contains hyperlinks based on the navigation structure A page banner is a picture or text object that includes a page’s title
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Unit C 16Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Turning on Shared Borders Shared borders can also contain other text and graphics that you want to appear in every page that uses them If you used a template to create a Web site, FrontPage may have automatically created shared borders for the site You can turn on shared borders from Page, Folders, or Navigation view
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Unit C 17Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Changing Link Bar Properties If you select the option to include navigation buttons when turning on shared borders, FrontPage creates a link bar component using the default settings for that shared border By default, the top shared border link bar contains links to same-level pages, the home page, and the parent page By default, the left and right shared border link bars contain links to child-level pages After you create shared borders, you can use the Link Bar Properties dialog box to review and revise the link bar
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Unit C 18Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Changing Link Bar Properties (cont.) Link Bar Properties dialog box for the top shared border
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Unit C 19Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Changing the Content of a Shared Border In Design view, you can add the following to any shared border: –Text –Pictures –Objects
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Unit C 20Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Changing the Content of a Shared Border (cont.) You can turn off shared borders for: –All pages in the navigation structure –The current page in Page view –Only the pages selected in Folders or Navigation view Useful when the content of a shared border repeats information that already exists in the page, such as company name and address
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Unit C 21Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Applying a Theme to a Web Site Themes ensure a consistent, professionally designed appearance in a site You can change a theme’s appearance by changing its attributes - active graphics, vivid colors, and background picture Active graphics are theme elements that become animated in the page Vivid colors are created by an enhanced color set to produce brighter, deeper colors A background picture is a picture that is used as the page’s background
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Unit C 22Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Applying a Theme to a Web Site (cont.) Preview of selected theme Theme attributes
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Unit C 23Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Customizing a Theme You can change the appearance of text, colors, hyperlinks, backgrounds, and other theme elements once you’ve applied a theme to a Web site Customizing a theme is more efficient than using Formatting commands to create a new look Customizing a theme helps ensure consistency
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Unit C 24Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Customizing a Theme (cont.)
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Unit C 25Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Summary Navigation view shows a Web site’s navigation structure FrontPage automatically adds the home page to the navigation structure You can add existing pages to the navigation structure
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Unit C 26Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Summary You can add blank pages to the navigation structure Shared borders are areas that appear on every page in a Web site that uses them Shared borders can contain a link bar or page banner
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Unit C 27Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Summary You can change link bar properties for shared borders You can change the content of a shared border Applying a theme to a Web site ensures a consistent, professionally designed appearance
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Unit C 28Working on the Web Site’s Hyperlinks and Appearance Summary You can change a theme’s appearance by changing its attributes You can customize a theme that you’ve applied to a Web site to more closely match your needs
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