5. Move the Eyedropper tool over the image until you find the correct color. (In Windows, you must
hold down the mouse button as you drag the Eyedropper off the Dreamweaver dialog box to the
image.) As you move the Eyedropper over an image, its colors are reflected in the color well, and
its hex value is shown on the color picker. Click once when you??™ve found the appropriate color.
The color picker closes.
6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 to grab other colors from the screen for other color swatches. Click OK when
you??™ve finished modifying the page properties.
You don??™t have to keep the image on your page to get its color. Just insert it temporarily and then delete it after
you??™ve used the Eyedropper to grab the shade you want.
After you??™ve determined your
tags for a Web site, the same basic
information
can go on every Web page. Dreamweaver provides a way to avoid having to insert the
same lines repeatedly: templates. After you??™ve set up the elements the way you like them, choose
File ??? Save As Template. To add
or any other tags to an existing template, you can edit the
template and then update the affected pages. For more information about templates, turn to Chapter 28.
In Dreamweaver, you can insert a
tag or any other tag using the tag objects, which you
access via the Head menu in the Insert bar??™s Common category (see Figure 6-6) or the Insert ??? Common ???
Head Tags menu option.
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