x,
which maintains a small but significant cadre of loyal users.
n A miniscule contingent of 3.x browsers in the machines of
determined users who have never (and may never) upgrade.
n A diverse assortment of browsers outside the mainstream,
including MSN TV (formerly known as WebTV), and Navigator for
Linux.
n Various versions of America Online browsers, which range
from being completely proprietary to being a blend of current
and special technologies. (As a specific example, AOL 9.0
is not the same as Internet Explorer 6.0, although it is based on it.)
Browser compatibility is one of a Web designer??™s primary concerns (not to mention
the source of major headaches), and many strategies are evolving to deal
with this matter. Dreamweaver is in the forefront of cross-browser Web page
design, both in terms of the type of code it routinely outputs and in its specialty
functions. This chapter examines the browser-targeting techniques available in
Dreamweaver. From multibrowser code to browser-validation capabilities,
Dreamweaver helps you get your Web pages out with the most features to the
widest audience.
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IN THIS CHAPTER
Maintaining different versions of
Web pages
Validating your code
Dreamweaver Technique:
Validating and Correcting a Web
Page
Testing your page against
specific browsers
Handling cross-browser
compatibility
Maximizing Browser
Targeting
Converting Pages in Dreamweaver
Web sites are constantly upgraded and modified.
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