htm, replaces the frameset with a single page.
If you click the Home link at the bottom of this page, the frameset re-opens.
Setting Frame Targets
Handling Frameless Browsers
Not all of today??™s browsers support frames. Netscape began supporting frames in Navigator version 2.0;
Microsoft didn??™t start until IE version 3.0??”and a few of the earlier versions for both browsers are still in
use, particularly among AOL users. Some less-prevalent browsers also do not support frames. HTML has a
built-in mechanism for working with browsers that are not frame-enabled: the
...tag pair.
A more vital reason to use the
tag than supporting older browsers is that most of the searchengine
indexing systems (called spiders) don??™t work with frames. If your frameset is index.html and you
want the spider to find the rest of your site, the content must include descriptive text as well
as navigational links to other pages in your site. Many Webmasters also include links to current versions of
Communicator or Internet Explorer to encourage their nonframe-capable visitors to upgrade.
When you begin to construct any frameset, Dreamweaver automatically inserts a area just
below the closing tag. If a browser is not frames-capable, it ignores the frameset and frame
information and renders what is found in the section.
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