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Introduction to MIS1 Copyright © 1998-2002 by Jerry Post Introduction to MIS Appendix 3 Creating Web Pages
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Introduction to MIS2 Appendix: Creating Web Pages Determine the content. Define a style. Create each page. Text Graphics Link the pages. Test your work. Transfer pages to a Web site.
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Introduction to MIS3 Appendix: Style Sheets BODY { margin-left: 5px; font: 10pt "Times New Roman", Times, serif; color: black; text-align: left; background-color: #e0ffff; } P { margin-left: 0px; font: 10pt "Times New Roman", Times, serif; color: black; background: transparent; } H1 { margin-left: 0px; font: 16pt "Times New Roman", Times, serif; color: black; font-weight: bold; background: transparent; } Page 3 Page 2 Page1 Style Sheet Body { … } P {…}
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Introduction to MIS4 Appendix: Sample HTML Sample HTML Page Section One This is a sample paragraph on a sample page.
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Introduction to MIS5 Appendix: Publishing Files Your computer Web server Internet or intranet Initial pages Accessible Web pages Transfer methods: Microsoft Front Page extensions FTP: file transfer protocol
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Introduction to MIS6 Web Development Hints Start with a tool like Microsoft Word (or Front Page, etc.). Get a good graphics package Keep page size small 30,000 - 50,000 bytes typically takes 8 - 15 seconds First develop the pages on your own computer. Test all links. Transfer later. Use style sheets. Consistency. Ease of change. Study design elements and art. Formal training/art classes. Study other sites. Watch for and create trends.
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