photography html templates

You can use your Internet browser to display the HTML source code of most web pages. This means that if you see a page you want, you can watch the underlying code and copy the designer's art. Copy Elsea someone tried and true methods is not plagiarism – it's just a good way to improve your skills.
If you use Microsoft Internet Explorer, just go to a page that you are Now interested in the top of the browser window, you should see a menu bar with a set of commands, similar to the following:
File Edit View Tools Help
Click on the View, and a vertical drop down menu is him, with the number of choices, looking something like this:
Toolbars
Status Bar
Explorer Bar
Go To
Stop
Refresh
Text Size
Encoding
Source
Privacy Report
Full Screen
Now click on the command source, and a copy of Microsoft Notepad should pop up containing the entire text of the page.
Because Notepad does not a feature of auto-wrap, you may see some very long lines of HTML code. Also, according to the website you choose to watch, you may see some good clean easy to read HTML code, or you may see a real mess.
In any case, you'll find that most web pages have two main sections, head and body. If you locate the body of the page you'll see it has most of the HTML tags that beginners are usually concerned; for table tags, for example, paragraph tags and text formatting tags.
However, you reach more advanced, you'll discover that Web pages are often dependent for their formatting on other external pages called a "CSS Style Pagesa. If you want to watch one of these pages, it may be necessary to rebuild its Internet address from information in the main page you are viewing. This will be a topic for a future article.
Finally, if you use another browser (eg Mozilla Firefox), then display the page source are slightly different. Click the View menu and select Page Source. Firefox displays the page source in a non-exclusive window.
copyright 2006 Sam Mela
Sam Mela worked as a Senior Software Developer for Sony Ericsson Corporation. He now writes articles about almost anything, and tutors math and computer languages. His web site is www.SamMela.com.
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