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Joseph W. Lowery

"Dreamweaver CS3 Bible"


The additional items represent standard commands that come with Dreamweaver. If you
add custom commands to Dreamweaver, they also appear in this menu.
n Site menu??”Web designers spend a good portion of the day directly interacting with a Web
server: putting up new files, getting old ones, and generally maintaining the site. To ease the
workflow, Dreamweaver groups site-management commands in their own menu.
n Window menu??”The Window menu manages both program and user-opened windows.
Through this menu you can open, close, arrange, bring to the front, or hide all the additional
Dreamweaver screens.
The commands for Dreamweaver??™s various windows, panels, and inspectors are toggles. Select
a command once to open the window; select it again to close it.
n Help menu??”Provides access to Dreamweaver??™s excellent online Help, as well as special examples
and lessons.
Summary
In this chapter, you were introduced to some of the power of Dreamweaver and had a look at its welldesigned
layout. From the Insert bar to the various customizable panels, Dreamweaver offers you an elegant,
flexible workspace for creating next-generation Web sites. Here are some of the key points covered in
this chapter:
n Windows users can choose from two basic workspace layouts, whereas Macintosh users have the
freedom to structure their workspace unencumbered.


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