Home > Articles > Graphics & Web Design > Dreamweaver & Flash

Planning and Defining Your Dreamweave MX Project

  • PrintPrint
  • Share ThisShare This
  • DiscussDiscuss
Before you can do anything in Dreamweaver, you need to plan and define your site. Creating a Dreamweaver site definition is the important first step in creating a Web site.

See all Sams Teach Yourself on InformIT Design & Creative Media Tutorials.

Dreamweaver MX is the premier professional Web editing software, and "Sams Teach Yourself Macromedia Dreamweaver MX in 24 Hours" enables you to create a functional Web site with it in just 24 lessons. This book introduces creating both simple and advanced Web pages, including forms, tables, and multimedia. Tips give you extra power-user information. Learn how to organize and construct a Web site, add JavaScript using Dreamweaver behaviors, and add dynamic HTML with layers and cascading style sheets. This book covers everything you need to know to make a Web site with Dreamweaver.

—Betsy Bruce

Introduction: Getting Started

You use the Site panel to plan, create, and manage your projects. It's important that you define your Web site before you start working on it so Dreamweaver knows how to set links properly. Defining a new site should always be your first step when you start working on a new project.

In this hour, you will learn

  • How to define a Web site using the Site Definition wizard

  • How to modify your Web site definition

  • How to organize a Web site

  • Share ThisShare This
  • Your Account

Discussions

Make a New Comment

You must log in in order to post a comment.

Related Resources

Emily NaveCommunity Tips: Starting a User Group Library
By Emily Nave on August 3, 20102 Comments

The Central Penn Adobe User Group (CPAUG) uses a library program to share books from different publishers with members. A short Q&A with group leader Megan Fister provides some great tips for starting your own.

Everything's ready and working, so let's write
By Federico Kereki on August 3, 2010 No Comments
All the audio code is ready, refactored, commented, and working, so it's writing time!
Keep going with GWT
By Federico Kereki on August 1, 2010 No Comments

I've been using GWT for some years now, and I'm still contented with the easier way for web development. After having written a book on GWT development, doing a blog seemed a good idea for answering questions, and for further expanding topics that didn't get a place in the book.

See All Related Blogs

Informit Network