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Setting the Editing options in the Role Settings dialog box
Use the Editing category to specify what kinds of changes
users can make to the website’s web pages, and how Contribute treats
paragraphs and typographic elements.
The Editing category provides options that let you specify which
page-editing attributes Contribute applies. When you set these permissions,
carefully consider who the content contributors are and what page-editing
capabilities they require.
Change the General editing restrictions options as necessary:
- Allow Unrestricted Editing
- Lets users modify any page elements that Contribute supports.
This includes editing text, editing tables, and adding images.
- Protect Scripts And Forms
- prevents users from deleting script
tags, server-side includes, code tags (such as ColdFusion, ASP,
JSP, and PHP tags), form tags, and form elements.
This option
is activated by default. Carefully consider whether the users editing
your website’s content are experienced enough to modify code embedded
in web pages. In general, tasks involving the modification of code and
code tags are best left to web developers using Dreamweaver.
- Prevent Users From Inserting Images
- Stops users from inserting images into a page and from editing
inline images. To let users have access to a select group of images
for use in a page, but restrict them from inserting any image they
can access, select this option, and create a shared assets library.
To
learn more about shared assets, see Set options for shared assets.
- Only Allow Text Editing And Formatting
- Specifies that users can only edit text, modify styles, and
apply bullets or numbered lists. Users cannot add or edit tables,
images, or links, or delete server directives or plug-in content. Those
tags are not editable.
Change
the Paragraph spacing options as necessary:
- One line, as in standard word processors
- applies inline CSS styles to each new p tag.
The CSS styles defined for a website usually cause paragraphs to
be rendered closer together. This style is often more familiar to users
who have worked with desktop publishing applications, which provide greater
typographic control. Users can include more space between paragraphs
by pressing Enter twice to add a standard HTML paragraph (p) tag.
A
trade-off to consider is that the use of inline CSS styles causes
more complex mark-up tags to be added to the page. This can make
the HTML structure of the page less clear to web designers who view
the HTML tags.
- Two lines, as in web page editors
- adds standard HTML paragraphs using p tags.
When a user presses the Enter key, Contribute adds the HTML p tag;
browsers display a blank line between paragraphs that use the p tag.
The
following example illustrates how these two spacing schemes are rendered
in a browser.
For
additional information on specifying paragraph types, see Set page-editing and paragraph settings.
Change the Other editing options as necessary:
- Allow users to edit web page source in external application
- lets users
edit a page’s source code using an external editor. Individual users
can select which external application to use for editing web page
source code by using the Application Preferences dialog box. On
computers that have Dreamweaver installed, Contribute uses Dreamweaver
as the default external editor. If Dreamweaver is not installed,
Contribute uses the default system text editor (Notepad in Windows,
or TextEdit in Mac OS).
For information on specifying an
external editor, see Set Contribute preferences.
Important: Allowing users to edit source code using an external editor ignores all editing restrictions enforced by Contribute. When selecting this option, make sure that it is assigned only to roles whose users understand how to modify web page source code.
- Allow users to insert third-party objects (Google and
PayPal)
- lets users insert Google and
PayPal extensions into web pages.
- Allow multiple consecutive spaces (uses )
- lets
the user add multiple consecutive spaces between words. When this
option is selected and a user adds multiple spaces, Contribute adds
multiple nbsp entities ( ...),
which causes browsers to display all the spaces instead of only
one space.
- Require ALT text for images (improves website accessibility)
- specifies that Contribute should
always prompt users for accessibility information so that the HTML
generated by Contribute is more accessible to people with disabilities.
For example, when adding an image, Contribute prompts the user to
enter alternative text to appear if a web page cannot display images
or if the viewer of the page has visual disabilities.
Contribute cannot validate whether
SWF content is accessible, and cautions users when SWF content is
added.
- Use <strong> and <em> in place of <b>
and <i>
- specifies that, when users format text as bold
or italic, Contribute should use the strong and em tags
instead of the b and i tags. The b and i tags
are considered deprecated in the latest HTML specification.
- Allow HTML Snippet Insertion
- specifies that users can
insert HTML code snippets in web pages and blog entries. This option
is enabled by default only for blog sites. You must manually edit
the bloghub.csi file to disable this feature for blog sites. If
this option is not selected for a user role, the HTML Snippet option
in the Insert menu will be disabled. By default, this option is not
enabled for websites.
- Line break type
- pop-up menu lets you specify which
character combination Contribute uses to denote line endings in
the saved file.
The default is Windows, which uses a carriage
return and then a line feed to denote a line break. This value should
be set based on the host computer for the website, not the computer
being used to edit the page.
Select another permissions category to modify or click OK
to apply your changes.
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