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Introduction

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Introduction

As you build your Web pages, you'll find that entering, selecting, correcting, moving, and copying will become commonplace. You can use all of the text functions as you do in any other Office program. With Microsoft Office FrontPage 2003, you can use all the common moving, deleting, and copying functions that you have already grown accustom to. The Office Clipboard is there to help as it holds up to 24 sections of material. You can also find and replace and format text just as you would in Word or Excel.

When entering text, you might find it necessary to add a bulleted or numbered list. You can also create sublists and collapsible lists to use on your pages. Choosing the alignment of your text, your line spacing, and paragraph tabs all work the same way as other Office 2003 programs.

It may become necessary to apply a style to your Web pages as you develop them. A style is a collection of formatting settings saved with a Web site or template that you can apply to text, graphics, and tables at any time. If you modify a style, you make the change once, but all text tagged with that style changes to reflect the new format. You can also create a Cascading Style Sheet (CSS), which is style information that can be referenced by individual or multiple Web pages.

Of course, while working with all of this text, using FrontPage's spell checker is a must. You can spell check, add familiar or custom words to your dictionary, check for common grammatical errors, or use the Thesaurus to enhance your Web pages. International Microsoft Office FrontPage users can change the language that appears on their screens by changing the default language settings.

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