Dave,

Even better, the BreezeBrowser pages are generated from a template
that you can edit.  I just put a link to my homepage in there and then
every generation has a link back automatically.

-- 
Best regards,
Bruce


Tuesday, April 12, 2005, 9:58:35 PM, you wrote:

bcin> Again, thanks Godfrey, Paul and Bruce.

bcin> I think i understand this now.
bcin> Other than creating and loading the files in the new
bcin> folder,i would just have to add a
bcin> link,and text ,back 
bcin> to the home page in the Breezbrowser generated index.html page.

bcin> Well, we'll find out tonight how well i retain information.LOL

bcin> Dave      

bcin>                                   > On Apr 13, 2005, at 4:35 AM, 
bcin> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> 
>> > If i want to link
>> > this new index page from my home page(www.caughtinmotion.com)
>> > would i just make a href link that follows the folders then.
>> 
>> Yes.
>> 
>> > When
>> > i log on to my FTP there is the main caughtinmotion folder that i
>> > open and have just been loading up pictures,changing indexs pages
>> > to new names type of thing. If i open a folder,say PAECAprilShow,
>> > for example,then put all the files in that,do i do the href link
>> > as: href"caughtinmotion/PAECAprilShow" and that will direct the
>> > person to the home page of the new pictures.??
>> 
>> Presuming that the web server is set up to auto-load the "index.html"
>> file as a default, yes. Otherwise, you need to fully specify the URL
>> .... "caughtinmotion/PAECAprilShow/index.html". Most web servers are
>> setup to support the default "index.html" as autoload, some take the
>> ..htm extension, so I duplicate my index.html files and rename the 
>> duplicate "index.htm".
>> 
>> > I cannot try it here at work as i don't have an FTP access set up.
>> 
>> You can test the structure and the links on a local file system with a
>> browser:
>> 
>> Create a folder A for the main index.html page.
>> Create a subfolder B for the specific event index.html pages.
>> 
>> In your main index.html, you want to point a link to the subfolder 
>> pages:
>>    <a href="b/index.html">horsey event today</a>
>> 
>> In your horsey event index.html, you want to point a link back to the
>> main:
>>    <a href="../index.html">main page</a>
>> 
>> I have 5 years of PAW projects organized this way:
>> ---
>> photo/
>>    PAW1/
>>      index.html (PAW index page)
>>      xx.htm (individual week pages)
>>      large/ (image files)
>>      cc/ (control image files)
>>    PAW2/
>>      ...
>>    PAW3/
>>      ...
>>    PAW4/
>>      ...
>>    PAW5/
>>      ...
>> ---
>> 
>> My welcome page points to each of the index pages:
>>     <A HREF="photo/PAW1/index.html">PAW Index 2001</A>
>> and each of the indicies and week pages contains a link back to the
>> welcome page:
>>     <A HREF="../../welcome.html#PAWhome">[graphic]</A>
>> 
>> This kind of directory structure keeps the website modular and easy to
>> maintain. It also keeps the number of files per directory to a 
>> reasonable number, speeding up file system operations. All the other
>> bits I post are organized this way too, as complete subdirectories,
>> which makes them easy to plug in or remove: one quick edit of the main
>> page is all that's required.
>> 
>> Godfrey
>> 

                                




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