Dreamweaver CS4 Resources
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Create a blank template
You can use the New Document dialog box
to create Dreamweaver templates. By default,
templates are saved in the Templates folder of your site.
- Select File > New.
- In the New Document dialog box, select the Blank Template
category.
- Select the kind of page you want to create from the Template
Type column. For example, select HTML template to create a plain
HTML template, select ColdFusion template to create a ColdFusion
template, and so on.
- If you want your new page to contain a CSS layout, select
a predesigned CSS layout from the Layout column; otherwise, select
None. Based on your selection, a preview and description of the
selected layout appears on the right side of the dialog box.
The predesigned CSS layouts provide the following types
of columns:
- Fixed
- Column width is specified in pixels. The column does not
resize based on the size of the browser or the site visitor’s text
settings.
- Elastic
- Column width is specified in a unit of measurement (ems)
relative to the size of the text. The design adapts if the site
visitor changes the text settings, but does not change based on
the size of the browser window.
- Liquid
- Column width is specified as a percentage of the site visitor’s
browser width. The design adapts if the site visitor makes the browser
wider or narrower, but does not change based on the site visitor’s
text settings.
- Hybrid
- Columns are a combination of any of the previous three options.
For example, in the two-column hybrid, the right sidebar layout
has a main column that scales to the size of the browser, and an
elastic column on the right that scales to the size of the site
visitor’s text settings.
- Select a document type from the DocType pop-up menu.
In most cases, you will want to leave this selected to the default
selection, XHTML 1.0 Transitional.
Selecting one of the XHTML document type definitions from
the DocType (DTD) menu makes your page XHTML-compliant. For example,
you can make an HTML document XHTML-compliant by selecting XHTML
1.0 Transitional or XHTML 1.0 Strict from the menu. XHTML (Extensible
Hypertext Markup Language) is a reformulation of HTML as an XML
application. Generally, using XHTML gives you the benefits of XML,
while ensuring the backward and future compatibility of your web
documents.
- If you selected a CSS layout in the Layout column, select
a location for the layout’s CSS from the Layout CSS pop-up menu.
- Add to Head
- Adds CSS for the layout to the head of the page you’re creating.
- Create New File
- Adds CSS for the layout to a new external CSS styles sheet
and attaches the new style sheet to the page you’re creating.
- Link To Existing File
- Lets you specify an existing CSS file that already contains the
CSS rules needed for the layout. To do this, click the Attach Style
Sheet icon
above
the Attach CSS file pane and select an existing CSS style sheet.
This option is particularly useful when you want to use the same
CSS layout (the CSS rules for which are contained in a single file)
across multiple documents.
- (Optional) You can also attach CSS style sheets to your
new page (unrelated to the CSS layout) when you create the page.
To do this, click the Attach Style Sheet icon
above
the Attach CSS file pane and select a CSS style sheet.
- Click Preferences if you want to set default document
preferences, such as a document type, encoding, and a file extension.
- Click Get More Content if you want to open Dreamweaver Exchange where you can download
more page design content.
- Click the Create button.
- Save the new document (File > Save). If you
haven’t added editable regions to the template yet, a dialog box
appears telling you that there are no editable regions in the document.
Click OK to close the dialog box.
- In the Save As dialog box, select a site in which to
save the template.
- In the File Name box, type a name for the new template.
You do not need to append a file extension to the name of the template.
When you click Save, the .dwt extension is appended to the new template,
which is saved in the Templates folder of your site.
Avoid using spaces and special characters in file and folder
names and do not begin a filename with a numeral. In particular,
do not use special characters (such as é, ç, or ¥) or punctuation
(such as colons, slashes, or periods) in the names of files you
intend to put on a remote server; many servers change these characters during
upload, which will cause any links to the files to break.
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