Dreamweaver.MX.1002004.The.Missing.Manual [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Dreamweaver.MX.1002004.The.Missing.Manual [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

David Sawyer McFarland

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9.4 Saving Framesets and Frames




It's always a good idea to save Web pages as soon as you create them. Furthermore,
you probably do some of your most important formatting, such as choosing a background
color, right at the beginning, and you don't want to lose that in a crash or
power failure. Finally, you need to save your frameset and all pages contained in it
before you can even preview the frameset.


To save a frameset, select it using any of the methods described above. Then choose
FileSave Frameset (or, to "spin off " a copy of the one you've opened, Save Frameset
As). The first time you save a frameset, the Save dialog box opens. Name the frameset
page and save it in your Web site folder. Although frameset pages have special properties,
they're still just Web pages, and they still end in the appropriate extension (l
or for regular Web pages, or one of the extensions.asp, .php, and so onused
for the dynamic pages described in Part VI of this book). You can save them anywhere
in your site folder (see Section 14.1 for some filing tips).


Saving a component page inside of a frame works just like saving regular documents:
Click the frame in the document window and then choose FileSave Frame, or press
Ctrl+S (-S). You can also save all of your frames at once, as described next.



9.4.1 Saving multiple frames




One of the complexities of working with frames and framesets is the fact that you're
dealing with many different Web pages at once, and, consequently, many different
files. As you modify your frames and framesets and make changes to the pages in
those frames, you'll be saving multiple files.


Fortunately, you don't have to plod through the document window, clicking inside
each frame and saving it independently. To save all the pages in a frameset in one
step, choose FileSave All.


Of course, just after you've created a frameset and frames, Dreamweaver doesn't yet
know the component pages' names or folder locations. It therefore shows you the Save
As dialog box (see Figure 9-8) over and over again, once for each component frame
page, so that you can name and file each one.


Clearly, you need to know which frame you're saving each time the Save As dialog
box appears. To help you, Dreamweaver provides a visual cue: A thick, crosshatched border appears around the frame you're about to save (see Figure 9-8). Type a name
for that page and press Enter, repeating the process for all pages.


The same crosshatched border appears around the entire document window when
you're saving the frameset itself.


The FileSave All
command is a powerful
shortcut for quickly
saving a frameset and all
its pages. The first time
you save the frameset
and frame pages,
Dreamweaver places a
fat, crosshatched border
around the frame you're
about to save, so you
can name each page
individually.



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