Dreamweaver includes a visual aid in the Web site management toolbox: the Site Map. With the Site Map, the
Web designer can see how the entire Web site is structured. However, you can use the Site Map to do far more.
It can be used to establish the structure of the Web site in addition to viewing it. New pages can be created,
and links can be added, modified, or deleted. In fact, the Site Map is so powerful, it becomes a site manager
as well.
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Laying the Groundwork in Dreamweaver CS3 Part I
FIGURE 2-22
The Files panel enables you to publish your Web site directly from within Dreamweaver to your application server
with Put or to retrieve them with Get.
File Check In/Check Out
On larger Web projects, more than one person is usually responsible for creation and daily upkeep of the
site. An editor may need to include the latest company press release, or a graphic artist may have to upload
a photo of the newest product??”all on the same page. To avoid conflicts with overlapping updates,
Dreamweaver has devised the Check In/Check Out system by which Web pages can be marked as checked
out and locked to prevent any other corrections until the file is once again checked in.
Dreamweaver places a green checkmark over a file??™s icon in the Site Files window when you have checked it
out and a red checkmark if another member of your team has checked it out.
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