Adobe INDESIGN 2.0 - USING HELP Help Manual page 383

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Choose System to create a palette using the built-in color palette for Windows or Mac
OS. This choice may produce unexpected results when the image is displayed on a
system using an 8-bit display with a different built-in palette.
Color Depth Lets you specify as many as 256 colors for each GIF created for your HTML
files. Lower numbers result in smaller file sizes for each GIF, but may produce undesirable
results. This option is available only for the Adaptive and Exact color palettes.
Interlace Causes GIF images to display gradually and in increasing detail as they are
downloaded to a Web browser.
Image Quality Lets you determine the tradeoff between compression (for smaller file
sizes) and image quality for each JPEG image created for your HTML file. Low produces the
smallest file and the lowest quality; Maximum produces images with the largest file size
and the highest quality.
Format Method Lets you determine how quickly JPEG graphics display when an HTML
page is opened. Choose Progressive to make the JPEG images display gradually and in
increasing detail as they are downloaded to a Web browser. Files created with this option
are slightly larger, and they require more RAM for viewing. Choose Baseline to make each
JPEG file display only after it has been completely downloaded; a placeholder appears in
its place until the file displays.
Setting encoding options
Choose Options at the top of the Export HTML dialog box to select the encoding format
for the HTML file. Select one of the following options in the Encoding menu:
Unicode (UTF-8)
Western (ISO-8859-1)
Japanese (Shift-JIS)
Japanese (ISO-2022-JP)
Japanese (EUC-JP)
Making changes to an HTML or XML file
You can make changes to an InDesign-created XML or HTML file using any of the
following methods:
Open an XML or HTML file in an editing application, such as Adobe GoLive. When you
open an InDesign HTML document in Adobe GoLive 4.0 or later, you may see question
marks or pink boxes on the page. Replace these invalid characters with valid HTML
characters as necessary.
Open the original InDesign document in InDesign, and then make the necessary
changes. Once you've made the changes in InDesign, you can again export the
document or specific pages of the document to XML or HTML, using the original
filename.
Using Help
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Working with HTML Files
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