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Joseph W. Lowery

"Dreamweaver CS3 Bible"


After you??™ve made your modifications to the template, you don??™t have to use the Save As
Template command to store the file??”you can use the regular File ??? Save command or the
keyboard shortcut Ctrl+S (Command+S). Likewise, if you want to save your template under a new name, use
the Save As command.
As with any set of files, there comes a time to clean house and remove files that are no longer in use. To
remove a template, first open the Templates category of the Assets panel. Next, select the file you want to
remove and click the Delete button.
Be forewarned: Dreamweaver does not alert you if files exist that were created from the template
that you??™re about to delete. Deleting the template, in effect, ???orphans??? those documents,
and they can no longer be updated via a template.
Applying templates
Dreamweaver makes it easy to try a variety of different looks for your document while maintaining the same
content. After you??™ve created a document from a template, you can apply any other template to it. The only
requirement is that the two templates have editable regions with the same names. When might this feature
come in handy? In one scenario, you might develop a number of possible Web site designs for a client and
create templates for each approach, which are then applied to the identical content.


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