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Joseph W. Lowery

"Dreamweaver CS3 Bible"


Emphasis; usually depicted as underlined or italicized text.
Keyboard; used to render text to be entered exactly.
Strikethrough text; used for showing text that has been deleted.
Sample; a sequence of literal characters.
Decreases the size of the selected text relative to the surrounding text; not currently supported
by Dreamweaver.
NOTE NOTE
172
Designing and Crafting Core Pages Part II
Tag Usage
Strong emphasis; usually rendered as bold text.
Subscript; the text is shown slightly lowered beneath the baseline.
Superscript; the text is shown slightly raised above the baseline.
Teletype; displayed with a monospaced font such as Courier.
Variable; used to distinguish variables from other programming code.
Logical styles are becoming increasingly important now that more browsers accept Cascading Style Sheets.
Style sheets make it possible to combine the best elements of both logical and physical styles. With CSS, you
can easily make the text within your tags blue, and the variables, denoted with the tag, green.
By default, Dreamweaver is now set to use logical styles and whenever you
click the Bold and Italic buttons on the Property inspector, respectively.


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