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If you are a Deamweaver user (I'm not) this might be useful for you. http://facility.berkeley.edu/pdf_files/beg_dream.pdf...
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If you are a Deamweaver user (I'm not) this might be useful for you.
http://facility.berkeley.edu/pdf_files/beg_dream.pdf
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Chris ___________________________________ AMD Sempron 2800+; 2048Mb ram; Windows XP SP3; Firefox; Thunderbird; Open Office; Online Armor Firewall, Nod32 Antivirus, Virgin Media cable broadband, Skype, Trillian |
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Worth a look for anyone who wants to look at the basics. But this article is rather outdated, it's about Dreamweaver 3, and web development has come a long way since then. Dreamweaver is currently on version 8.
However, thanks for posting bunnysan. :wink: |
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OK it does relate to Dreamweaver 3 but the functions remain much the same as version 4, that was followed by version MX.
MX screen display is different than previous versions but can be set to emulate version 4. I use MX in conjunction with Windows Notepad, Notepad is a little used basic text editor with no formating like MS word programs. That makes it the ideal tool for code work, as you learn more its of more value than Dreamwever is for web page making. I use MX to do the basic standard parts and refine and edit with Notepad.
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Knowledge is not knowing all the answers, but knowing where to find the answers. www.smitheram.co.uk Moderator of, Web Design/Graphics Room. P4-XP pro-IE7-B/B-ZA-AVG |
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