Dreamweaver MX 2004: The Missing Manual FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
This Dreamweaver step-by-step guide treats you like the professional you are. Itᄑs strong on details, and replete with ᄑliveᄑ examples. And itᄑll help you accomplish virtually anything you want in Dreamweaver -- design, interactivity, site management, you name it.
The further you go, the more useful this book gets. David Sawyer McFarlandᄑs especially strong on CSS, behaviors, layers, snippets, libraries, and templates. He offers an entire section on dynamic, database-driven sites -- including downloadable examples in ASP, ASP.NET, and PHP. Throughout, McFarland annotates his step-by-step instructions with real, working insights -- so you can go far beyond the ᄑrecipe.ᄑ And roughly half the chapters contain live tutorials walking you through real page development assignments. Bill Camarda
Bill Camarda is a consultant, writer, and web/multimedia content developer. His 15 books include Special Edition Using Word 2003 and Upgrading & Fixing Networks for Dummies, Second Edition.
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004 offers a rich environment for building professional Web sites. The program offers drag-and-drop simplicity, produces clean HTML code, and incorporates the tools to build dynamic, data-base-driven Web sites. Unfortunately, it comes without one of the most important features of all: a printed manual. This expanded edition builds on the authoritative, witty, crystal-clear prose of its bestselling predecessor, and offers exclusive features. Armed with this book, both first-time and experienced Web designers can bring stunning, interactive Web sites to life. With over 500 illustrations, a handcrafted index, and the clarity of thought that has made bestsellers of every Missing Manual, Dreamweaver MX 2004: The Missing Manual is the ultimate atlas for the excellence-driven Web designer.
SYNOPSIS
Featuring step-by-step instructions, this guide explains how to build a web page, link from one page to another, spice up the design with graphics, apply cascading style sheets, view the underlying HTML code, and collect information using forms. The more advanced chapters cover managing files within a web site, testing pages and links, shaping pages based on a template, and connecting Dreamweaver to a database. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
Dreamweaver (see also Computer Media, LJ 1/03) reigns as the editor of choice for many web designers, and MX 2004 adds better Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) handling and other features that may spur demand for updated guides. Teach Yourself, rather basic for most users, takes a step-by-step, full-color, screen shot-heavy approach to accomplishing common tasks. A good overview for beginners, appropriate for all public libraries. The more comprehensive Missing Manual addresses beginning to intermediate users, with special attention to using CSS. Sidebars include additional info for power users, FAQs, definitions, and other useful topics. Its clear, step-by-step tutorials on each major subject (with downloadable files and finished examples), plus links to additional resources, make this an especially useful self-study guide; highly recommended for all libraries. For intermediate to advanced users, Bible and Complete Reference strive for thorough coverage. Bible's CD contains a trial version of Dreamweaver MX 2004, plus project files; Complete's CD, meanwhile, offers trial versions of each MX 2004 product, Dreamweaver extensions, and sample code. Bible goes through each Dreamweaver feature, from touring menu commands to adding extensions and customizing the software. New features are highlighted in the text; notes, cautions, and tips add info; cross references help navigate and collect relevant information for specific tasks; and chapter summaries aid in assimilating the information provided. Its attention to workflow and collaboration will help designers working on large projects. Complete's coverage ranges from Dreamweaver basics to extensions; its links to additional resources aid users in extending Dreamweaver's functionality. It walks readers through the entire process of creating a web site and using the various aspects of the software. Both Bible and Complete are appropriate for larger public libraries and for academic libraries serving design and computer science programs; Bible's clarity gives it the edge if you need only one title. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.