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Unleash your web design potential with Dreamweaver CS6! Learn to navigate the workspace, organize sites, and use essential tools for creating dynamic web pages with ease. Discover the basics of website planning and structure. This guide covers everything from exploring the workspace to setting up websites, making it ideal for beginners and experienced users alike.
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Chapter 1 Getting Started with Dreamweaver
Chapter 1 Lessons Introduction • Explore the Dreamweaver workspace • View a web page and use Help • Plan and set up a website • Add a folder and pages
Introduction Getting Started with Dreamweaver • What is Dreamweaver? • Web design software for creating a web page or a complex website • What is a website? • A group of related web pages that are linked together and share a common interface and design
Introduction Using Dreamweaver Tools • What does Dreamweaver CS6 offer? • Design tools that can create dynamic and interactive web page without writing HTML code • Organizational tools • Site management tools • Graphic site maps
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Dreamweaver CS6 Workspace Workspace switcher Insert panel Menu bar (Win) Related files toolbar Document toolbar Drag the panel border up or down to resize insert panel Document window Tag selector Property inspector Files panel Zoom tool Hand tool Select tool
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Dreamweaver CS6 Workspace – cont. • Document Window • Area where you create and edit web pages • Menu (or Application) Bar • Above Document Window, includes menu names, a Workspace switcher, and other application commands • Panel • A window that displays information on a particular topic or contains related commands • Insert Panel • Categories of buttons that contain popular Dreamweaver Commands (Common, Layout, Forms, Data, Spry, etc.)
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Dreamweaver CS6 Workspace – cont. • Document Toolbar • Contains buttons and drop-down menus you can use to change the current work mode, preview web pages, view file-management option • Related Files Toolbar • Files that are linked to a document and are necessary for the document to display correctly (ex. External CSS style sheet) • Property Inspector • Located at the bottom of the Dreamweaver window, lets you view and change the properties of the selected object. • Context sensitive – will change based on you selection
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Dreamweaver CS6 Workspace – cont. • Live View • Displays an open document as if you were viewing it in a browser • Standard Toolbar • Contains buttons you can use to execute frequently used commands (also available in File and Edit Menus) • Style Rendering Toolbar • Contains buttons that you can use to display data for different platforms (ie telephones and televisions) • Tag Selector • Shows the HTML tag used at the Insertion Point location
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Working with Dreamweaver Views • Design view • Shows a page as it would appear in a browser • Primarily used for designing and creating a web page • Code view • Shows HTML code for the page • Code and Design view (Split View) • Combination of Code and Design Views • Best view for correcting errors because you can see how code changes affect the appearance of pages
Lesson 1: Explore the Dreamweaver Workspace Code View for New Document Switch Design View to Live View button Show Code and Design view button Show Design view button Show Code view button Coding toolbar Some options may differ depending on what was last selected Click to collapse all panels to icons
Lesson 2: View a Web Page and Use Help Opening a Web Page • Create new or open existing • Website • Web page • Homepage • First web page that appears when viewers go to a website • Sets the look and feel of the website and directs viewers to the rest of the pages in the website
Lesson 2: View a Web Page and Use Help Basic Web Page Elements • Text • Hyperlinks (links) • Graphics (LESS IS MORE) • Banners – Images that display at the top of the screen • Navigation bars • Bars that contain multiple links that are usually organized in rows or columns • Image map – Image that has been divided into sections, each of which containing a link • Rich media content • Engaging images, interactive elements, video, or animations
Lesson 2: View a Web Page and Use Help Using Dreamweaver Help • Clicking the Dreamweaver Help command opens the Dreamweaver Help page that contains a list of topics and subtopics by category
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Phases of a Website Development Project
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Planning a Website • Planning a website is a complex process that requires careful planning including: • Developing a plan • Creating the basic structure • Creating the content • Testing • Modifying (if necessary) • Publishing
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Setting Up the Basic Structure • Storyboard (or wireboard) is a small sketch that represents each page • Allow you to visualize how each page is linked to one another • Parent pages: home page • Child pages: pages linked below it • Contains root folders and assets • Root folder: stores all the pages or HTML files for the site • Assets: subfolder used to store all of the files that are not pages
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Striped Umbrella Website Storyboard
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Creating and Collecting the Page Content • Gather the files that will be used • Some will come from other software • Some will be done in Dreamweaver
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Testing the Pages • Browsers and browser versions • Screen sizes • Connection download time • Testing is a continuous process
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Modifying the Pages • Changes are constantly needed • Test page after each change • Modifying and testing is an ongoing process
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website 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 (ie Go Daddy, Fat Cow, blue host) • A website must be published to the web server before it can be viewed by others
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Publishing the Site • IP: Internet Protocol • IP address • Example: 207.456.123.2 • ISP: Internet Service Provider • Hosts website • FTP: File Transfer Protocol • Host, host directory, login, password
Lesson 3: Plan and Define a Website Publishing the Site • Create a root folder • Define the website • Set up web server access
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages Creating a Root Folder Using the Files Panel Your drive or folder may differ If you just see a drive or folder name here you do not currently have a website open Striped_umbrella root folder
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages Site Definition Striped_Umbrella Dialog Box Advanced tab Website name Local root folder text box – your drive may differ Browse for file icon
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages Adding a Folder to a Website • After defining a website, you need to create folders to organize the files that will make up the site • You can use the assets folder to store all non-HTML files, such as images or sound files
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages The Assets Folder • Stores all non-HTML (media) files: • Image files • Sound files • Video files • Set it as the default location to store the website images • You might want to create subfolders for each type of file
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages Creating 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)
Lesson 4: Add a Folder and Pages Adding Pages to a Website • Once you add and name pages to your website, 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