Dreamweaver 4 in an Instant

Dreamweaver 4 in an Instant

by Mike Wooldridge (Author), Michael S . Toot (Author)

Synopsis

Using the award-winning Visual learning system, this compact, value-priced guide visually shows you how to get up and running on the core program features in Dreamweaver 4 - which you'll use over and over again. Concise, step-by-step instructions and consistent placement of elements make for fast learning of essential Dreamweaver 4 tasks. Dreamweaver(r) 4 in an Instant covers the most popular features of Dreamweaver 4 including coding features, Javascript debugging, adding Flash buttons and text, media tracking, and graphics editing.

$26.25

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 248
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 15 Aug 2001

ISBN 10: 0764536281
ISBN 13: 9780764536281

Author Bio
Michael S. Toot is an author and software program manager in the Seattle area. He is an MCSE and MCP+I and has been involved with Microsoft operating systems since 1992. He has written a book on Windows 2000 Server and enjoys learning new programs and operating systems, even those not from Microsoft. When not working or writing books, he is reading, sailing, writing movie reviews, fiction, and nonfiction, and conducting adventures in home renovation and repair on his ninety--three year old home. Mike Wooldridge (Berkeley, California) has worked as an independent Web developer, technology writer, and educator since 1995, and has been using Dreamweaver since version 1.0, and because of its exceptional support for handling large web sites, uses it as his primary tool for maintaining client web sites. He's written about Web technology for various publications, including Macworld, CNET and MacHome Journal. His articles have covered Web design, graphics and multimedia. He is currently teaching classes on HTML for UC Berkeley Extension, having developed a new Designing Graphics for the Web class--which of course covers Dreamweaver--that will start in the spring. In 1998, Mike won an award from Apple Computer for a project built with QuickTime VR, a photographic virtual--reality technology. He is a graduate of UC Santa Cruz's Graduate Program in Science Writing, which trains scientists to write about technical subjects for lay audiences, as well as a degree from UC Berkeley in genetics.