Non-Roman Characters - Adobe GOLIVE CS2 User Manual

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Using back-references in wildcard searches
Back-references let you replace a selection with part of the wildcard string you entered in the Find text box. A back­
reference consists of a backslash character followed by a number, for example "\1", "\2", and so on. The number refers
to a subexpression (enclosed in parentheses) of the wildcard search pattern in the Find text box:
"\1" refers to the first subexpression in the wildcard search pattern. This subexpression starts at the first opening
bracket from the left and ends with the complementary closing bracket.
"\2" refers to the second subexpression, which starts at the second opening bracket from the left and ends with the
complementary closing bracket.
When you click the Replace button, each selection is replaced with the part of the matching text that has been recog­
nized by the subexpression that the back-reference refers to.
For example, you enter the wildcard search pattern ((Adobe)?GoLive) in the Find text box to find any occurrence of
"GoLive" or "Adobe GoLive". The "?" character makes the "Adobe" enclosed in the second pair of parentheses
optional. If you enter the back-reference \1 CS in the Replace text box, the found text is replaced with the contents
of the first pair of parentheses plus the letters CS. If the match is "Adobe GoLive", the result is Adobe GoLive CS. If
the match is "GoLive", the result is GoLive CS.

Non-roman characters

Non-roman character sets
Your ability to switch between roman and non-roman character sets depends on your operating system:
In Windows versions earlier than Windows 2000, you cannot directly create non-roman (double-byte) web pages
by using a roman (single-byte) operating system. However, you can import double-byte HTML files created with
another operating system. You can then view the HTML source code in GoLive, although the double-byte text
doesn't display correctly in the Layout Editor or Preview. Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 and later can display
double-byte scripts, so you can preview double-byte files using the Show In Browser command in GoLive.
The Windows 2000 and XP operating systems with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 or later let you view and create
double-byte content without the entire native script operating system. You can custom install the Language Pack
for the script you need. See your system documentation for further information.
Mac OS 9.1 and later include Multilingual Internet Access as an optional installation. This software lets GoLive
display double-byte scripts, even without the native operating system. With the appropriate Language Kit custom
installed, you can create and edit non-roman text. See your system documentation for further information.
Double-byte text in GoLive
By default, GoLive uses Multilingual UTF-8 encoding, which supports both roman and double-byte languages. To
create content in a double-byte language, however, you also need the appropriate system fonts.
In the File > Document Encoding submenu, you can choose other encoding options, such as Japanese and Multi­
lingual UTF-16. You can add to these menu options in the Encodings preferences.
ADOBE GOLIVE CS2
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