![]() ![]() Please complete the tutorial topics listed below to find out what you need to know to apply Inline Styles to your media elements using KompoZer. Organize your media around your text, applying the left or right alignment for images, as well as applying the image margin spacing to at least 5 pixels. ![]() For each table cell, use the same padding and spacing (e.g., 5 pixels each), as well as and the same alignment (e.g., top, middle, or bottom) around content in the table cells so that the content is not bumping up against the table borders and matches up from one cell to the next.You can then insert text into one column and image media in the other. Either make the image border equal to zero or be sure to match it with any other images. For each image, add one row and two columns.Optionally, add a border, cell background color and/or colored text. Set the width to 95% or less and do not set fixed heights to keep content aligned as viewers resize browsers.Tables with text and/or images - You may want to create a table to properly align multiple images or audio/video clips on a single page with their related text. By using the same color scheme, heading format, text, buttons, and style, you make it easy for the viewer to understand they are still on your web site and have not been taken to another location on the Internet by clicking on a link. This web page is a package deal, with the other part of the package being the August 2013 Linux Productivity Magazine, themed Bluefish: Quality and Speed, which describes the many benefits of Bluefish.What guidelines must you follow when you set your web page styles?Įditing Image Properties - Keep your web pages consistent. The page you're reading right now is about Bluefish's technical details. I used Notepad to write a couple websites in 1995. When the first 25 pages of Troubleshooters.Com were written in the summer of 1996, MS Frontpage was my tool of choice. By January 1997, WYSIWYG Netscape Gold was the Troubleshooters.Com HTML editor of choice.Īs time went on, and Troubleshooters.Com migrated from Windows to Linux, and then bounced between Linux distributions, the chosen web editor progressed through various descendants and forks of Netscape Gold: Netscape Composer, Mozilla Composer, Nvu, Kompozer.īecause it was WYSIWYG, it was much, much easier, faster, and less error prone than a text editor. Then came the great WYSIWYG HTML editor drought of 2013. I switched to Bluegriffon, an "I'll show you" type fork from one of the original authors of Nvu or Kompozer. But my laptop OS, OpenSuSE, didn't have Bluegriffon, it still had Kompozer. And of course there was the fact that Bluegriffon couldn't do certain things I was used to doing. And given the fact that the entire reason I used WYSIWYG HTML authoring tools was speed, and the fact that Bluegriffon was slowing me down, what the heck was I doing?īefore going on, let me explain why I used WYSIWYG editors for sixteen years, in spite of the fact that most of my technologist friends urged me to edit HTML directly. Words per day is vital to the way I write, and the way I do business. Typing out tags is slow - remembering which codes to type out, and they're syntax, is a lot slower. Slow enough to make me forget my train of thought while writing. ![]()
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