Hi Lin,
I am getting ready to set up a page for my 2020 Ride for Roswell, which
raises money for cancer research at Roswell Park in Buffalo. I am going to
supply this and other scripts for a donation to the ride. I am going to do
the 100 mile ride again this year. I should have it up in a day or
So, Rick, when will this be available in your store? ;-)
On Thu, Mar 26, 2020 at 4:48 PM Art Campbell wrote:
> If this is the script that Rick ran up for me, big thumbs up -- works
> great, allowing you to push a format to a file, book...
>
> Quick and easy.
>
> Art Campbell
>
If this is the script that Rick ran up for me, big thumbs up -- works
great, allowing you to push a format to a file, book...
Quick and easy.
Art Campbell
art.campb...@gmail.com
"... In my opinion, there's nothing in this world beats a '52 Vincent and
a redheaded girl." -- Richard
In the settings screen, you can tell it to use your css file.
I am not next to a computer so cannot tell you exact path
Caroline Tabach
On Thu, 26 Mar 2020, 16:44 Doug, wrote:
> I use a specific layout.css file that never changes. However, each time I
> publish to HTML5, Frame uses a default
I often use MIF snippets.
1. Save the file with the formats you want in it as a MIF.
2. Open the file in a text editor.
3. Delete everything except the definitions for the tags you want.
4. Save the file (make sure the extension stays MIF).
5. In FM, open the MIF file and the file
I use a clean template approach for doing such imports, making sure there is no
chance that I am importing something else even if I select the wrong options.
Note: A truly 'clean' template would removed all formatting definitions in the
template and not just char, para, table, master page and
I use a specific layout.css file that never changes. However, each time I
publish to HTML5, Frame uses a default layout.css file. I end up having to
manually replace this each time.
Is there a way I can make Frame use my layout.css file for the publish
process? Has anyone figured this out?