On Tuesday 19 September 2006 09:11 am, Gregory Forster wrote:
> Use a text editor to see where the links are directed.  I use
> conTEXT, which is a free program.  When I use OpenOffice as my web
> site designer, first, I always chech the fille using a goood texte
> editor, second, I make sure it's W3C verified, third, I make sure
> it displays properlt and the same using Firefox and Internet
> Explorer.  What I like about using conTEXT is when editing web
> pages, it color codes text, HTML codes, etc. which makes it super
> to edit.
>
> Using OpenOffice for your web design, you'll finnd out that you
> have a bit of "cleaning up" to do, to make it W3C verifiable.
>
> Greg

     Some specific areas to clean up: if you use styles (as you 
should), <script> will have to be changed to script type="css/text">; 
any tables you create will need changes in the column width entries 
(W3C does not like 123* for the width); any manual formating in the 
table cells will result in some extra code); and Frames will also 
produce some extra code.

Dan

> James Reed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Dear Open Office:
>   I have been using Open Office.org 2.0 to design my website.  I
> have built all of the pages with a template I designed on this
> program.  My navigation bar is on the left side of the page with
> hyperlinks installed to go to all of the other pages.  My problem
> is that when I click on a hyperlink it goes to the address and says
> the page cannot be displayed.  I'm assuming at this point that I
> have missed a detail on how to save or label the individual pages
> so that they can be accessed.  I wanted to make sure that all of
> the links worked before uploading them to my website.
>
>   Any help you can provide will be greatly appreciated.
>
>   Thank you,
>   James Reed

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