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Courses >
Web Page Design > Intermediate Dreamweaver CS3
Take
your Adobe Dreamweaver skills to the next level under the tutelage of a
proven Web development expert. Examine pure CSS layout and learn how to
incorporate multimedia elements such as Flash video and audio. Discover
the uses of XML and XSL.
In this new intermediate-level
Dreamweaver class, you'll learn to harness the power of this
industry-standard Web design tool. During this hands-on training,
you'll learn how to use standards-compliant Cascading Style Sheets to
create Web pages that are easier to maintain and more search
engine-friendly.
Recommended Courses:
Students who enrolled in Intermediate Dreamweaver CS3 were also interested in the following courses:
Designing Effective Websites
Introduction to Dreamweaver CS3
Achieving Top Search Engine Positions
Intermediate CSS and XHTML
Creating Web Pages II
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 |
In
our first lesson, you'll get familiar with the code Adobe Dreamweaver
generates in response to the steps you perform in the WYSIWYG
interface. Intimidated by code? Don't be. By the end of this lesson,
you'll be well on your way to a complete understanding of exactly how
HTML, XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript work together to build your site
content. All previous non-coders will come away with these topics
demystified, and code-savvy users will learn the various ways
Dreamweaver enhances code editing.
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| Friday - Lesson 02 |
Cascading
Style Sheets (CSS) have been with us since the mid 90s. Yet, because of
the slow state of browser development, CSS is only now taking its
rightful place at the center of modern Web design. CSS governs content
presentation, while HTML and XHTML handle document structure. In this
lesson, we'll take a closer look at CSS, see how it works hand-in-hand
with markup, and examine the various tools Dreamweaver gives us to work
with CSS in a WYSIWYG environment.
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| Week Two |
| Wednesday - Lesson 03 |
Well-structured
navigation elements are the backbone of every successful Web site. In
the past, designers attempted to make their navigation elements stand
out using various image and JavaScript-based effects, more often than
not, guaranteeing their navigation was anything but well-structured.
Fortunately, there's a cure: list-based navigation elements. In this
lesson, we'll expand our CSS horizons and discover how to format our
structured lists any way we like.
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| Friday - Lesson 04 |
In
print design, there's a level of consistency that just isn't possible
on the Web. This is because every copy of a book, magazine, or brochure
is virtually identical. On the Web, we don't have the same luxury.
People view our sites through different browsers, with different
operating systems, and at different screen resolutions. Our job as
designers is to try and create as much of a uniform user experience as
possible given these rather wide parameters. It isn't always easy, but
there are steps we can take to make it more so. Today, we'll discuss
some basic Web design principles, develop a layout strategy, and begin
building the first of our in-class site pages. This page will
ultimately become the template for the subsequent pages in our site.
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| Week Three |
| Wednesday - Lesson 05 |
In
today's lesson, we'll focus on Dreamweaver templates. Templates become
a real asset when you have other people working on site content who are
not Web designers themselves. A Dreamweaver template allows you to fix
the layout of pages so inexperienced folks can't mess them up when
they're updating content. No more, "Oops, Boss! I went to update the
tip of the week message and now the links have disappeared!" You'll
learn just what Dreamweaver templates do, how to build them, and how to
apply them to the pages of our site.
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| Friday - Lesson 06 |
Do
you own a printer? I bet you do or at least have access to one. Ever
print a Web page? I'm sure you have. Now, do you own a cell phone too?
How about a PDA, like a Palm Pilot? Maybe a Blackberry device? Guess
what? All of these devices are Web-enabled. People use them to access
the Internet, read their e-mail, and browse Web pages. Today, you're
going to learn all about styling our pages for devices other than the
browser. We'll look at the different types of devices we can style for
and examine some of the tools Dreamweaver provides to make styling for
devices easier.
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| Week Four |
| Wednesday - Lesson 07 |
I'm sure you've heard the word accessibility
mentioned in reference to creating Web content. While I'm sure you have
some idea of what it means, I've got a hunch you need to know more.
Accessibility refers to Section 508 of the U.S. Federal Rehabilitation
Act, and it deals with making site content accessible for users with
disabilities. In today's lesson, we'll examine the deeper meaning of
Web site accessibility, learn its basic concepts, and discover how to
keep Dreamweaver on the ball, accessibility-wise, so anyone can use
your site with ease.
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| Friday - Lesson 08 |
Have
you been to YouTube to watch videos? Or have you been to Amazon.com to
preview music? These types of audio and video files are known as media objects.
A media object is any type of file that requires the browser to call
upon a helper application in order to view or play it. For example,
Flash, QuickTime, Windows Media, Real Media, and MPEG audio. In today's
lesson, we'll talk about what media objects are, what software is
required to play them, and the various techniques Dreamweaver has for
placing this type of content in the sites we build.
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| Week Five |
| Wednesday - Lesson 09 |
If
you've ever used Dreamweaver to create an image rollover or image-based
navigation bar, you've been using JavaScript. In Dreamweaver, any
predefined JavaScript-based effect is called a behavior. These
Dreamweaver behaviors allow you to swap images, generate pop-up
windows, as well as more than 20 other possible effects. In this
lesson, we'll examine the interface for working with behaviors and
discover how to implement some of the more useful ones.
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| Friday - Lesson 10 |
Forms
allow information to be passed between the site visitor and the Web
server. For the Web server to use the data visitors enter, there must
be a processing script on the server. This script, or groups of
scripts, accepts the data and does something with it. But in order to
use a form, you need to build it first. In today's lesson, we'll focus
on the creation of form pages, their formatting, and their layout.
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| Week Six |
| Wednesday - Lesson 11 |
Everybody
wants to know how to build dynamic Web sites—sites whose pages are
generated on the fly via databases and scripting languages. Well, we
have to walk before we can run. So, we're going to start small, using
the Extensible Markup Language (XML). In today's lesson, we're going to
take a look at what XML is, create a simple XML database, and then
learn how to pull data out of our small database and format it with the
Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)—all without a lick of programming!
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| Friday - Lesson 12 |
Everyone
who wants to be a Web designer should have a firm understanding of who
they're designing for and how best to meet the needs of their audience.
In today's lesson, we'll step away from Dreamweaver and take a look at
the single-most important component of the Web—people. You'll discover
some of the basic truths behind how people read Web content and learn
how best to structure your content to facilitate and fascinate your
readers.
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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;
completion of Robert Fuller's Introduction to Dreamweaver CS3
online course (or equivalent experience); 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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