Understanding Document View In Dreamweaver CS4
Adobe Dreamweaver contains a large array of floating palettes called panels. Some of these contain options that are duplicated both in the main and context menus or which can be accessed with keyboard shortcuts. You will therefore find that you do not need to keep all of Dreamweaver’s panels open.
If you are new to Dreamweaver, the first document view keyboard shortcut you should learn is F4. This is the shortcut for Window – Hide/Show Panels (or View – Hide/Show Panels). This very useful toggle causes all of Dreamweaver’s panels to disappear or reappear at their original positions.
To show and hide the various panels, use the options in the Window menu. Also, in addition to the panels, Dreamweaver has two other tools palettes which are referred to as toolbars. One of these, the Document toolbar, is normally displayed at the document window. To make this toolbar visible, choose View-Toolbars-Document.
The first three icons on the Document toolbar are perhaps the most frequently used: Code, Split and Design views. The document title box is used to set the title which will appear in the title bar of the user’s browser (as opposed to the document’s file name). The file management pop-up menu contains options for uploading and downloading the document as well as commands to be used when working in collaboration. (These options are also available in the Site menu.) The browser preview pop-up menu allows you to preview your page in any of the browsers you specify using the Edit Browser List command.
Dreamweaver’s document toolbar is only visible if you are working in document view. To be working in document view simply means to be editing an HTML, or other, document. If you are not in document view then you are normally working in the Files panel. There are three ways of entering document view from Files view.
Firstly, you can simply open an HTML document by double-clicking its name or by choosing File – Open.
2. You can also create a new blank file by choosing File – New.
3. You can activate a document which is already open by clicking its button in the Windows Taskbar or by choosing its name from the bottom of the Window menu.
The writer of this article is a developer and trainer with Macresource Computer Training, a UK IT training company offering Adobe Dreamweaver training courses at their central London training centre.
Tagged with: Cascading Style Sheets • computer software • Computers • computers and the internet • CSS • Dreamweaver training • HTML • web design • web development
Filed under: Computers
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