Preview Your Page In A Browser - MACROMEDIA DREAMWEAVER 8-GETTING STARTED WITH DREAMWEAVER Getting Started

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96
Tutorial: Adding Content to Pages
5.
Repeat the previous steps to link each word or set of words that you
typed for the navigation. You want to create six more links: one for Chef
Ipsum, Articles, Special Events, Location, Menu, and Contact Us.
Link each word or set of words to the menu.html page, and be careful
to avoid the space before and after the words or set of words when you
create your links. This is only a set of dummy links; in a real-world site,
you would link each word in the navigation to its own distinct page.
Links don't work when you click them in the Document window in
Dreamweaver; links work only in a browser. To make sure your links work
correctly, preview your page in a browser. For instructions about how to
do this, continue to
"Preview your page in a browser" on page
6.
Save your page.

Preview your page in a browser

The Design view gives you a rough idea of what your page will look like on
the web, but you must preview the page in a browser to see the definitive
end result. Though browsers in general produce the same results, each
browser version can display HTML pages somewhat differently.
Dreamweaver attempts to produce HTML that will look as similar as
possible from one browser to another; but sometimes differences can't be
avoided. Thus, previewing your work in a browser is the only way for you
to see what your site visitors will see after you publish your pages.
96.

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