Seems as though everyone wants a Web presence. ; -)
We're going to create our Web pages using Netscape Page Composer,
which comes free with Netscape.
|| Getting
Started || Inserting
Links || Saving ||
Inserting Links: Easier
Methods || Adding Images
|| Adding Alt Tags ||
|| Indexing
Using Targets || Creating
a "Home" Page with Links to Others || Working
on Your Page ||
To begin: In Netscape, click and hold
down Communicator on the toolbar at the top of the screen
Pressing on the lefthand side of the mouse, move the arrow down to Page
Composer and release.
This gives you a blank page. Page Composer allows you to create Web
pages with text. It is much like a word processor. You can
highlight text and then bold it, underline it, etc. Best to
learn by just doing some experimentation.
To get started -- On your blank Page Composer
page, somewhere near the top, type your name and then type in some text
(or just put in nonsense letters, e.g.,
sldkfjg jsowie uryutysod if sldkfjs;ldkjf )
Try highlighting the text and changing fonts, formats, etc.
Inserting hypertext
links into your page
Position your cursor approximately where you want your link to go.
Click on
on the toolbar at the top of the screen (about 2/3rds of the way across),
and you get this dialog box:
To practice, put in a link to Cabrillo College Library.
You put the text for the link in the first box.
You put its URL (the Internet address) in the Link
box
Then you click OK

I am still in Page Composer -- look for
this symbol (top left of screen)
Any linkI put in won't work until I have saved
the page and view it through Navigator
Here's the sequence you follow:
-
Compose your Web page using Page Composer;
-
Save your file to disk (or wherever)
-
View the Web page through Navigator (hyperlinks
then work)
Save file to disk
1. Insert your disk in drive A
2. Under File (top left of the
screen), select Save as
3. Make sure you are saving it to the
A: drive; switch to A: drive, if necessary
4. Name your file and add .html
as the extension, e.g., practice.html
5. Click on Save
To see your file in Netscape, click
on Preview (yellow sun at the top of the screen)
To get back to your page in Composer, click on the bottom of
the screen, where you see
After you work on your page, be sure to Save
it
To toggle back to the Navigator screen, click on bottom of screen,
where you see
Hit Reload (at top of screen) so you can look at the latest
changes!
ADDING LINKS TO YOUR WEB PAGE --- easier
methods
Suppose you are out on the Internet looking at
interesting sites. You want to put links to them on your Web page
in Page Composer. For the method just demonstrated, you have to have
the URL written down. This can be a #!&%$#@!
bother (especially with complex, lengthy URLs).
There are two other methods you can use that
make all this easier.
Here's the first:
-
Highlight the URL for the site; do a Ctrl+c to copy [Hold down Ctrl
key and tap the letter c]
-
Go to your Web page in Page Composer. Click on the word Link on the
Toolbar (as you did above). Type in the name of the site. Click
on the box for the URL; do a Ctrl+v to paste the URL in. [Hold down
Ctrl and tap the letter v]
Here's the second:
-
On your own Web page in Composer, position your cursor sort of where you
want the new link to go
-
On the Internet page you want to link to, put your pointer on the green
symbol
next to
the
Location box (where the URL is).
-
With your mouse, left click on that green symbol and hold the click.
A small link symbol appears.
-
Drag down to where your Web page in Composer is referenced at the bottom
on your screen.
Don't let up on the left mouse click!!
-
Wait a moment and your Web page will pop up. Still holding down the
mouse click, drag the pointer to where you want the link to be. (It
doesn't have to be positioned perfectly; you can easily move it later.)
Note: Sometimes this method, though fun and slick, refuses to work (for
reasons that leave us gasping in amazement). Don't get too frustrated
if you have troubles. It's probably easier to demonstrate than describe
-- so ask one of us to show you!
Adding Images
You should only use images and art that is clearly marked as freely
available.
Otherwise, email and ask permission!! A good resources
for reviewing some of
the issues involved is Fair
Use Harbor -- a tutorial on fair use in educational settings
There are a number of sites on the Internet that make images freely available
for others to use. Here are some
(others are listed at: Making
Web Pages)
Important:
To add an image to your Web page, you have to first save it (either
on the desktop or on your disk)
How to Transfer an Image to Your Disk
When you get to your image, click on it and press on the
right side of the mouse. Go down to
Save image as Save it. Use .gif
or .jpg as the extension.

How to Put the Image on Your Web Page
-
Be on your Web page in Composer
-
Click on Image on the Composition Toolbar
to get this dialog box:
-
Click on Choose File
-
Find the the .gif or .jpg file on your disk that you want
and click on it
-
Click on Open
-
Click on OK
To change how your image is positioned, click on it, go to Image on the
Composition Toolbar (as you did above) and experiment with
how to arrange text around your image, or how many pixels to have
to the left and right of the image, etc. But, please
be forewarned. Composer is a nifty little editor, but not
very goodat handling images. "You get what you pay
for;" it's free. ; -)
Adding Alt Tags
To make your Web pages accessible to everyone, it is important to put
in alternative tags to identify any images that you add to your Web pages.
Select from
the link dialog page and type in a name or description of the image. Then,
click on OK.
Indexing your Web page: putting targets
on your page and linking to them
-
Highlight the word or phrase to be used as the target
-
Click on Target (along the toolbar at the top of the screen) and
click OK
That word or phrase is now a target on your page (the little
target symbol that appears on your page in Page Composer will not be visible
when you look at the page in Navigator)
-
Type in the word or phrase you want to use as an index to one of the targets
-
Click on Link (along the toolbar at the top of the screen) and select
the target word or phrase in the box labelled "Select a named target..."
-
Click on OK
Creating a "home" page with links to other pages
-
Create your "home" page. Convention is to save it as an index.
Suppose you called it
chem4index.html
-
Creat the other pages. Save them each with distinctive names.
For example, chem4syllabus.html, chem4class1.html, chem4class2.html
-
Save all the Web pages to the same disk (in the same folder, if you have
more than one) -- or, if you are saving on a server, save them all to the
same directory
-
Put in links back and forth between the pages
WORKING ON YOUR
PAGE
-
Let's say you start a Web page and save it to disk.
At a later time, you want to work on it again.
To open a Web page on your disk
1. Put your disk in Drive A:
2. Click on File.
2. Select Open Page.
3. Go to your A: drive, click on your file name. Open
it in Page Composer if you are going to be working on it.
-
If you have your Web page open in Netscape and
you want to transfer it over to Page Composer,
1. Click on File,
2. Then on Edit Page
|
Topsy N. Smalley 8/00
|