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Courses >
Web Page Design > Introduction to Dreamweaver CS3
Learn
Adobe Dreamweaver from a Web design pro, and get the training you need
to develop first-class Web sites! We'll uncover the secrets of
effective page layout—secrets that ensure your sites reach and impress
your audience. Then you'll master the techniques for producing fully
functioning sites, learning how to insert and format text, images,
hyperlinks, tables, and a variety of media formats. And finally, you'll
see how Dreamweaver makes it a snap to upload sites to a Web server and
maintain them once they're online.
Along the way, we'll answer
the five questions that guarantee success for any Web site project. If
you have no Web design experience, you'll love how easy Dreamweaver
makes it to learn HTML, the language that drives the Internet!
Recommended Courses:
Students who enrolled in Introduction to Dreamweaver CS3 were also interested in the following courses:
Designing Effective Websites
Intermediate Dreamweaver CS3
Achieving Top Search Engine Positions
Introduction to CSS and XHTML
Creating Web Pages
Syllabus:
All
courses run for six weeks, with a two-week grace period at the end. Two
lessons are released each week for the six-week duration of the course.
You do not have to be present when the lesson is released, but you must
complete each lesson within two weeks of its release.
A new
section of each course starts on the second or third Wednesday of each
month. If enrolling in a series of two or more courses, please be sure
to space the start date for each course at least two months apart.
| Week One |
| Wednesday - Lesson 01 |
Perhaps
Adobe Dreamweaver's greatest strength is its powerful combination of
tools all wrapped up in a clean and simple interface. Our first lesson
is all about introducing you to that interface. Not only will you learn
the primary interface elements, you'll also learn how to preview your
work in any of 20 potential Web browsers—because rigorous testing is
the key to a successful Web site. By testing and adapting your site
documents across multiple browsers, you'll ensure that each site
visitor, regardless of the browser they prefer, has a positive user
experience.
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| Friday - Lesson 02 |
Dreamweaver
is a site creation and management tool, not just some over-glorified
HTML editor. While you're building a site, Dreamweaver has the ability
to track each color you assign, every image and multimedia file you
insert, every Web address you reference, as well as every step you take
while working on a specific document. Dreamweaver then keeps all this
information right at your fingertips to use again and again. In today's
lesson, you'll learn the steps you need to take to put these features
to work for you.
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| Week Two |
| Wednesday - Lesson 03 |
The
two most important aspects of any Web site are what it says and how it
looks. In this lesson on text formatting, you'll learn how to control
the look of text in your Web pages. In certain respects, formatting
text with Dreamweaver is very similar to formatting text in your word
processor. It's important to understand, however, that Dreamweaver is
not a word processor. And perhaps more important, word processing and
Web design are totally different worlds.
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| Friday - Lesson 04 |
Believe
it or not, the very early Web browsers couldn't display images, and
it's doubtful the Web would have become so popular if the same were
still true today. In this lesson, you'll learn how to use Dreamweaver
to insert and format images within your documents. What's more, even
though Dreamweaver isn't a true image-editing application, it does
offer some very impressive editing tools, and this lesson will expose
you to these features as well.
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| Week Three |
| Wednesday - Lesson 05 |
There's
a reason we call it the Web. The metaphor perfectly describes
Hypertext's functionality. One document links to many others, which in
turn link to many others that potentially link back to where you
started. The functional aspect of hypertext—the hyperlink—is what makes
it all possible. In this lesson, you'll examine pathnames (the heart of
all hyperlinks), giving you a better understanding of the file
structure of your Web site and how links function. You'll learn how to
create named anchor links and e-mail links, and how to use
Dreamweaver's impressive link management tools.
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| Friday - Lesson 06 |
Macromedia
Flash allows you to create complex animations with very small file
sizes, tailor-made for delivery via the Web. But, this is a class about
Dreamweaver—how does Flash enter into it? Dreamweaver provides you with
Flash objects you can make use of without having the Flash program or
knowing how to create native Flash objects. You can insert pre-made
Flash buttons, as well as create Flash text that makes use of whatever
fonts you have available on your computer. We'll go over all of it in
today's lesson.
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| Week Four |
| Wednesday - Lesson 07 |
In
this lesson, you'll find out how to insert, format, and lay out a
document using tables. When HTML was first created, tables were
expected to do what they have traditionally done—display data. That
meant they would consist of columns and rows of information, with
headings and borderlines—just like the typical spreadsheet. But, tables
are very useful layout elements too. Because tables are well-supported
across the major browsers and they provide this dual functionality,
they're among the most common elements you'll find in Web pages.
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| Friday - Lesson 08 |
In
today's lesson, you'll learn how to build frames-based Web sites.
Frames are much-maligned by Web design pundits, but this frustration
has little to do with any actually weakness on the part of frames. It
has more to do with the fact that doing frames right is very much like
preparing fine cuisine—if you don't pay attention to details,
everything will come out awful! Working with frames demands that you
change your traditional view of building site pages, and in this
lesson, I'll show you how that's done. And, because Dreamweaver allows
you to build a frames-based site visually, the learning curve isn't
half as steep.
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| Week Five |
| Wednesday - Lesson 09 |
Cascading
Style Sheets (CSS) are the future of Web design. In fact, CSS has been
the approved layout and design technology for about a decade. It's just
taken us this long to get the browser manufacturers to play along. In
today's lesson, we'll explore CSS basics to see just how CSS works, and
we'll examine Dreamweaver's exceptional CSS tools for doing the coding
for us.
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| Friday - Lesson 10 |
Today's
lesson is all about reusability, and in Dreamweaver, that means the
Assets and History panels. You'll learn how to use the Assets panel to
quickly access site elements and get them into new pages so you don't
have to go hunting through your site for previously used content. When
we explore the History panel, you'll learn how to undo anything you
wish you hadn't done, as well as redo anything so you can repeat
formatting procedures throughout your site.
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| Week Six |
| Wednesday - Lesson 11 |
In
the life cycle of a Web site, the design and development period is the
most fun. But it's, unfortunately, the shortest. In the long run,
you'll spend much more time managing and maintaining your site.
Dreamweaver appreciates this reality of the Webmaster's work schedule
and puts as much thought and effort into Dreamweaver's site management
and maintenance tools as it puts into the development tools. In this
lesson, you'll learn how to use Dreamweaver's site management tools to
define your remote site in order to upload and retrieve files from the
Web server. You'll also learn about Dreamweaver's Check-In and
Check-Out feature, which lets workgroups develop sites together without
overwriting content, and you'll discover how to attach design notes so
fellow workers can communicate across conflicting work schedules.
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| Friday - Lesson 12 |
By
now you have an introductory knowledge of Dreamweaver, which means you
know just enough to be dangerous. We'll spend our last lesson together
going over site planning. In this lesson, you'll learn the five basic
questions that you'll need to answer before starting any Web site
project. We'll discuss where and how to gather your site content (text,
graphics, and other media), as well as different strategies for
organizing that content once you've got it. By the time you finish this
lesson, it won't matter what type of Web site you need to build—you'll
know exactly how to plan for success!
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This
course includes a knowledgeable and caring instructor who will guide
you through your lessons, facilitate discussions, and answer your
questions. The instructor for this course will be Robert Fuller.
Robert
Fuller is a veteran of New York's Silicon Alley where he was Senior
Developer for Travelocity's Site 59, Inc. He has also taken his
experience into the classroom, teaching thousands of students
Web-related design practices and technologies. Robert is the author of
"HTML in 10 Simple Steps or Less" for John Wiley & Sons, both the
"Dreamweaver 4 Virtual Classroom" and the "HTML Virtual Classroom" for
McGraw-Hill/Osborne, and he is a contributing author for both "The
Photoshop CS2 Bible" Standard and Professional editions, also for John
Wiley & Sons.
Requirements:
Adobe Dreamweaver CS3
(please be sure to install this software on your computer before the
course begins); Microsoft Windows Vista or XP or Macintosh OS X; at
least one year of experience using a computer; the ability to install
programs on your computer and work with files; Internet access, e-mail,
the Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox Web browser, and the
Adobe Flash and PDF plug-ins
(two free and simple downloads you obtain at
http://www.adobe.com/downloads by clicking Get Adobe Flash Player and
Get Adobe Reader).
To purchase this course, click the Enroll Now button below:
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