Now it seems that the whole world is beating on the Internet, but you missed the opportunity. Everyone has their own web page, from two-year-old little cousin to more than 80-year-old aunt all have, and you do not. You want to wake up immediately, sniff the smell of UNIX, and build your own homepage. But how to build it? You pluck up the courage to learn HTML, and frankly, you learn confused and never want to write anything like that. What should we do?
You know some tools that can help you. You've heard that Microsoft FrontPage is the leader in this. But you have to take the time to learn the software, and you are not too unsure if FrontPage is the right choice for you.
Let's take a moment to see what the pros and cons of using FrontPage are. Let's talk about Lee.
You can easily make email feedback tables, discussion groups, and even add search capabilities, as long as the server supports FrontPage Server-side extensions. (Don't worry, we'll talk about it later on.) For those who feel less creative, using FrontPage can make your site look consistent and professional.
Now let's talk about its drawbacks.
If at some point you decide to add something that FrontPage doesn't support and then want to edit the HTML source code, you're in trouble. Even the smartest HTML writers find it hard to read a whole bunch of inexplicable code generated by FrontPage.
The second disadvantage is that FrontPage is a bit less good at learning. Some of the words used by FrontPage are sometimes more difficult to understand. Because of this, we have written this article-give you the basic knowledge, so that you use FrontPage to be more handy.
Finally, FrontPage is not very friendly to browsers outside of Microsoft. Most of what it makes is only suitable for IE. So, if you want your Web page to be a lot of different users (who don't want it?), you have to be very careful.