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Joseph W. Lowery

"Dreamweaver CS3 Bible"

UsableNet has contributed a valuable guide to accessibility issues, and two new guides from Wrox
are onboard??”one for ASP 3.0 and one for JSP.
History panel
The repetitiveness of building a Web site is often a matter of entering the same series of commands over and
over. You might, for example, need to add a vertical margin of 10 pixels and a horizontal margin of 5
around most, but not all, of the images on a page. Rather than selecting each image and then repeatedly
entering these values in the Property inspector, you can now enter the values once and save that action as a
command.
You can find the feature that brings this degree of automation to Dreamweaver in the History panel. The
History panel shows each step taken by a designer as the page is developed. Although this visual display is
great for complex, multilevel undo actions, the capability to save any number of your steps as an instantly
available command is truly timesaving.
Site Management Tools
Updating and revising are ongoing for nearly every Web site. For this reason, site management tools are as
important to a Web authoring program as site creation tools. Dreamweaver delivers on both counts.
Object libraries
In addition to site management functions that have become traditional, such as FTP publishing,
Dreamweaver adds a whole new class of functionality called libraries.


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