Creating and Designing Pages: Using Cascading Style Sheets
Tutorials and Articles
Using Cascading Style Sheets in Dreamweaver 3 and 4
Learn the basics of using Cascading Style Sheets. See how you can separate style from content.
Creating different style sheets for different platforms in Dreamweaver 3 and 4
Have you ever noticed that the Web pages you create using Cascading Style Sheets look different on different platforms? Learn how to solve this problem by creating separate external style sheets for each platform.
TechNotes
- tn_19111—Internet Explorer crashes when printing the Halo Left/Right Nav page design
- tn_18911—Dreamweaver MX 2004 Property inspector does not recognize multiple CSS styles
- tn_18886—Take advantage of the sample CSS styles in Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004
- tn_18865—Paste Formatted from Word creates CSS style names with Mso prefixes
- tn_18784—How to create a non-moving wallpaper for your webpages
- tn_16720—CSS files lose edits in Check In/Check Out environment
- tn_16498—New features of Cascading Style Sheets in Dreamweaver MX
- tn_16180—Using CSS to modify the spacing between paragraphs or lines of text
- tn_15680—Setting different hover effects for individual links
- tn_15679—Using the a:hover feature in CSS
- tn_15350—Creating multiple link styles
- tn_15231—How to create document-level Cascading Style Sheets
- tn_15230—An overview of Cascading Style Sheets
- tn_15119—Removing CSS Classes from a Dreamweaver page
- tn_14088—How to remove the underline from linked text
- tn_12922—How to create an external Cascading Style Sheet