adobe dreamweaver cs5 on demand part 20 pot

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adobe dreamweaver cs5 on demand part 20 pot

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ptg 122 Chapter 5 The results of performing a Find All and Replace All search in the Find and Replace dialog box appear within the Results window under the Search tab. The search results remain there until the next time you per- form a Find All or Replace All. You can access the search results by opening the Results panel. Within the Results panel, you can quickly highlight a specific result, open the Find and Replace dialog box, stop a search in progress, and save the search results in the XML. Using the Results Panel Use the Results Panel Open the Web page you want to find and replace text. Click the Window menu, and then click Results to open the Results panel. The list of pages containing the previous search results opens in the Results panel at the bottom of the Dreamweaver window. Click the Search tab if necessary. Choose from the following Find and Replace options: ◆ Highlight Selection. Double- click a selection from the Results panel to open the file if necessary and highlight the selection in the document. ◆ Find and Replace. Click to open the Find and Replace dialog box. ◆ Stop. Click to stop a search in progress. ◆ Save Report. Click to save the search results as a report in the XML file format. Click the Window menu, and then click Results to close the Results panel. 5 4 3 2 1 2 3 Highlight selection Save Report Find and Replace Stop Results panel Selected item in Design view and Results panel From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg Chapter 5 Working with Web Page Text 123 If your Web page contains acronyms, such as MADD for Mothers Against Drunk Driving, and abbreviations, such as CE for Copy Editor, you can define them using HTML tags for use with search engines, spell checkers, language translation programs, or speech synthesizers. Defining Acronyms and Abbreviations Define Acronyms and Abbreviations Open the Web page you want to define an acronym or abbreviation. Select the acronym or abbreviation in the text. Click the Insert menu, point to HTML, point to Text Objects, and then click Acronym or Abbreviation. Enter the full text of the acronym or abbreviation. Enter the language you want, such as en for English, it for Italian, or de for German. Click OK. 6 5 4 3 2 1 21 3 4 5 6 From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg 124 Chapter 5 One of the worst things that you can do (well, almost one of the worst) is to have misspelled words on your Web page. Not only do they dis- tract the reader, they distract from the overall impression of profession- alism that you're trying to imply. Besides, since everyone on the planet knows there's something called a spellchecker there's simply no excuse for misspelled words. Fortunately, Dreamweaver includes a simple spellchecker to help avoid such awkward moments. You should always spell check a Web page before it's moved online. One other fine point: Using a spellchecker does not mean that the words are used cor- rectly. For example, to, too, and two, are all spelled correctly; however, they have very different meanings. So, the order of events follows: Spell Check first; then read the text (called type editing), and be sure that it makes sense. Checking Spelling Check Spelling Open the Web page you want to spell check. Click the Commands menu, and then click Check Spelling. TIMESAVER Press Shift+F7 to check spelling. Dreamweaver begins the spell check process and stops on the first problem word. Use the following options to work with the problem word: ◆ Word Not Found In Dictionary. Displays the offending word, and highlights the word in the Web page document. ◆ Change To. Type in the word you want to use to substitute for the offending word. ◆ Suggestions. Choose an option from the listed suggestions. ◆ Add To Personal. Click to add the offending word to Dreamweaver's personal dictionary. Excellent for names or technical terms that are spelled correctly, but keep coming up as misspelled. 3 2 1 3 From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg Chapter 5 Working with Web Page Text 125 Choose from the following controls to change the selection: ◆ Ignore. Ignore the word, proceed to the next offending word, and don't add the word to the personal dictionary. ◆ Change. Change the word; based on the text in the Change To dialog box, or the appropriate selected suggestion. ◆ Ignore All. Ignore all occurrences of the offending word, but don't add to the personal dictionary. ◆ Change All. Change all occurrences of the offending word. Click Close to close the Check Spelling dialog box, or click OK when the spell check is completed. 5 4 5 4 5 Did You Know? You can spell check in more than English. Adobe uses the LILO (Linguistic Library Optimized) speller engine, which supports 37 different dictionaries (New!). The default dic- tionary matches the installed version of Dreamweaver. Click the Edit (Win) or Dreamweaver (Mac) menu, click Preferences, click the General cate- gory, click the Spelling dictionary list arrow, select the dictionary language you want, and then click OK. You can download dictionaries for additional languages from the Dreamweaver Support Center. Click the Help menu, and then click Dreamweaver Support Center. From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg 126 Chapter 5 Probably one of the greatest inventions of the computer industry is the ability to Undo, and Redo. Now, if we could just figure out how to give real life an undo feature… that would be something. Dreamweaver gives us the ability to undo our past mistakes, and redo something we wished we had not removed. The History panel shows the actions you've just taken in Dreamweaver, and enables you to undo or repeat any number of steps. History gives us the ability to control our working environment, and allows us to try creative ideas; knowing full well, that if we make a mistake, it's a simple matter to go back in time. The History panel is Dreamweaver's time machine. Using Undo and Redo Undo or Redo One Action at a Time ◆ Click the Edit menu, and then click Undo, or click the Undo button on the Standard toolbar to reverse your most recent action, such as typing a word or formatting a paragraph. TIMESAVER Press Ctrl+Z (Win) or A +Z (Mac) to undo. ◆ Click the Edit menu, and then click Redo, or click the Redo button on the Standard toolbar to restore the last action you reversed. TIMESAVER Press Ctrl+Y to redo your undo. Click to Undo or Redo the previous command or action. Undo and Redo buttons on the Standard toolbar From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg Chapter 5 Working with Web Page Text 127 Undo or Redo Actions Using the History Panel Open a Web document, and perform several actions (i.e. create text, insert an image, etc). Click the Window menu, and then click History to open the History panel. TIMESAVER Press Shift+F10 to open the History panel. You'll see a line-by-line listing of all the steps performed to the current Web document. To perform a multip le undo, click the arrow located to the left History panel, and then drag it up the list. Every item listed under the arrow will be undone. NOTE To pe rfo rm a mu lti ple redo, click the arrow, and drag it down the list. All items above the arrow (including the item the arrow is pointing) will be restored. 3 2 1 3 Did You Know? You can change the number of History Steps. The default number of History steps is 50; while that may seem enough for most folks, you can change the number of steps in Preferences. Click the Edit (Win) or Dreamweaver (Mac) menu, click Preferences, click the General category, and then change the number of steps. The maximum value for history steps is 9,999… that's a lot of steps. When you’re done, click OK. From the Library of Wow! eBook ptg 128 Chapter 5 Setting Font Preferences Set Font Preferences Click the Dreamweaver (Mac) or Edit (Win) menu, and then click Preferences. Click the Fonts category. Select the encoding type you want to view. Select from the following check boxes: ◆ Proportional Font. Select the font and size you want to use to display normal text, such as paragraphs, headings, and tables. ◆ Fixed Font. Select the font and size you want to use to display text within pre, code, and tt tags. ◆ Code View. Select the font and size you want to use for all text in Code view. Select the Use Dynamic Font Mapping check box. Click OK. 6 5 4 3 2 1 You can use the Fonts section of the Preferences dialog box to view encoding for the selected font and size you want. File encoding makes sure your Web browser and Dreamweaver use the right character set for the selected language. The fonts you select in the Preferences dia- log box don’t affect the page display in a Web browser, however, it does affect the page display in Dreamweaver. You can specify the font and size you want to use in Code view, or as a proportional or fixed font. 2 3 4 6 5 From the Library of Wow! eBook . translation programs, or speech synthesizers. Defining Acronyms and Abbreviations Define Acronyms and Abbreviations Open the Web page you want to define an acronym or abbreviation. Select the acronym. offending word. ◆ Suggestions. Choose an option from the listed suggestions. ◆ Add To Personal. Click to add the offending word to Dreamweaver& apos;s personal dictionary. Excellent for names. controls to change the selection: ◆ Ignore. Ignore the word, proceed to the next offending word, and don't add the word to the personal dictionary. ◆ Change. Change the word; based on

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