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How Long To Learn Dreamweaver? | ||
Discussion by chris1234 with 32 Replies.
Last Update: November 22, 2010, 10:46 pm (View Latest) | Page 1 of 3 pages. | ||
I want to redo my site more pro, and would like to do it myself. What would a typical building timescale be from start to completion using this?
And does anyone know any useful sites that may help?
Has anyone used dreamweaver and not like it / had any problems?
thanks
chris
Tue Feb 22, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Tue Feb 22, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Tue Feb 22, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Took me a month to learn basic Dreamweaver but I guess it depends on the learner.
Wed Feb 23, 2005 Reply New Discussion
ofcourse i knew HTML and PHP very well before hand..
lets see... it depends how big your site is and how much work it needs...
and also how much time you can put into redesigning your site..
maybe if you tell me all this i can tell you how much time it will take.
can you tell ur website's URL?
Wed Feb 23, 2005 Reply New Discussion
QUOTE (chris1234)
I want to redo my site more pro, and would like to do it myself. What would a typical building timescale be from start to completion using this?And does anyone know any useful sites that may help?
Has anyone used dreamweaver and not like it / had any problems?
I'm a hard-coder, myself. I use Dreamweaver to generate sample sites very quickly. What is nice about DW is the little "properties box" that allows you to go through your options very quickly. Master using the properties box and you will be flying through your site creation in no time at all.
The built-in FTP client leaves a little to be desired, but all-in-all the software is pretty easy to use.
Here's a quick tip....
Make a simple site in DW. Your pages are HOME, ABOUT THIS SITE, CONTACT, and LINKS. Design your HOME page, save it as index.htm, then Save As ABOUT.htm. Make changes to the page that turn it into your ABOUT THIS SITE page, save it as about.htm, then Save As contact.htm. Change the page to reflect your contact info, save it, then Save As links.htm. Change the page so it has a few links on it, save it, then create a menu with the names of all the pages (with links). Copy the entire menu, open up each page you created and paste the menu on each page. Check it out! In about 10 minutes you have an entire sample site with uniform pages and a uniform menu!
Okay, this is sort of a lame lesson, but I never said this was a tutorial, just a tip. But that is really how easy it is to design a site in Dreamweaver. Once you have a few pages, you can go through the Menu bar and try all kinds of things.
Good luck!
Wed Feb 23, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Wed Feb 23, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
QUOTE (firedoor)
I've found it very easy so far, but you may need to just take a look at a few tutorials while using it. My site looks a whole lot better now. If you want a professional look then this is the program for you. I also looked at frontpage but i didn't like it much.Dreamweaver for a "professional look"?Dreamweaver is useful but only when you must finish a work very quickly and you are far from the end, when you have to create and administrate a big site, that receives a lot of visits and need update you have to write yourself the code and know very well how to write HTML in each editor, so when you need to update or fix a bug you can use a simple editor like VI that can be reached via ssh and remote login...and FrontPage generates a code worse than my mother's one....
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Quite cool but the loading time for the application is quite slow on my computer.
I would prefer to use textpad to do my editing, it is a lot faster cos it is a light program. It is quite fexible too!
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
It reminds me of Microsoft Office because it has similar characteristics. You can grow with it as you become more proficient. And I must say that it’s hard for someone to tell you how long it will take you to develop a site because that depends on your skills and how much time you devote to it on a daily basis.
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Since there's so much of talk about DreamWeaver - I got my hands on the eBook titled "DreamWeaver MX 2004 BIBLE" by Joseph W. Lowery published by Wiley Publishing. I can try put it up on a place from where you guys can grab it - only if I receive a lot of responses to this post. It's huge - 34.5 Meg !!! So it'll be a big pain
Chapter overview:
Chapters 1-5: Dreamweaver Basic
Chapters 6-10: Web Design & Layout Fundamentals
Chapters 11-17: Advanced Design Tools & Techniques
Chapters 18-22: Incorporating Dynamic Data
Chapters 23-26: Adding Multimedia Elements
Chapters 27-31: Enhancing Website Management & Workflow
Chapters 32-35: Extending Dreamweaver
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Peace
Aaron
Thu Feb 24, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Thu Mar 3, 2005 Reply New Discussion
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