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Updated 17 - December - 2007
Based on KompoZer version 0.7.10
© Charles Cooke 2005 - 2007
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/
Find your way around the guide
Soft copy using the active bookmarks and the index
Hard copy using the Contents and index
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 2
Timeline
The original Nvu User Guide was available in both HTML and pdf formats.
At version 0.7.10 KompoZer started diverging from Nvu, in particular in the
improvements introduced in the CaScadeS CSS editor. This necessitated de-
scribing two different methods if both products were to be covered. The HTML
version of the User Guide did this and was renamed KompoZer and Nvu User
Guide.
With the passage of time during the preparation of a pdf version the need to
describe methods specific to Nvu has diminished. This pdf version includes only
methods which are specific to KompoZer but, at date of issue, the content is
otherwise identical to the HTML version. Once again the title has been changed
– to KompoZer User Guide.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 3
Contents.......................................................3
1 Introduction...........................................5
1.1 What is KompoZer?..................................5
1.2 Who is KompoZer for?..............................5
1.3 Scope of the guide....................................5
1.4 Methodology.............................................5
1.5 Navigation................................................5
1.6 KompoZer and Nvu...................................5
2 Quick start.............................................6
2.1 Preliminary..............................................6
2.2 To create a new page:...............................6
2.3 To open an existing page..........................6
2.4 Editing a web page...................................6
2.5 Saving a Page...........................................6
2.6 Browsing a page.......................................6
2.7 Help.........................................................6
3 Using KompoZer........................................7
3.1 Finding your way around.........................7
3.2 Starting a page.........................................7
3.2.1 Document types (Doctype)..................7
3.2.2 Options for starting a page..................8
3.3 Editing in KompoZer................................8
3.3.1 Tutorial - Brief introduction to HTML..8
3.3.2 Saving files.........................................8
3.3.3 Printing pages.....................................9
3.4 Working with text.....................................9
3.4.1 Text on a page....................................9
3.4.2 Formatting text...................................9
3.4.3 Positioning text...................................9
3.4.4 Lists.................................................10
3.4.5 More formatting................................10
3.4.6 Importing text...................................10
3.4.7 Special characters............................11
3.4.8 Checking spelling..............................11
3.4.9 Viewing text......................................12
3.5 Working with images..............................12
3.5.1 Inserting images...............................12
3.5.2 Positioning and resizing images........12
3.6 Using tables...........................................12
3.6.1 Inserting tables.................................13
3.6.2 Formatting tables.............................13
3.6.3 Inserting Text...................................14
3.6.4 Centring tables.................................15
3.6.5 Improving tables...............................15
3.7 Links......................................................15
3.7.1 Linking text......................................15
3.7.2 Linking images.................................16
3.7.3 Editing Links....................................16
3.8 Frames...................................................16
3.9 Forms....................................................17
3.9.1 Introduction.....................................17
3.9.2 To set up a form...............................17
3.9.3 Form control styles...........................17
3.10 Layers..................................................17
3.10.1 What layers are...............................17
3.10.2 Creating layers................................17
3.10.3 Characteristics of layers..................17
3.10.4 Manipulating layers........................18
3.10.5 Gluing............................................18
3.10.6 Doing it in style..............................18
3.10.7 Using classes..................................18
3.11 Borders................................................18
3.12 The Body..............................................19
3.13 Table of contents..................................19
3.13.1 Introduction....................................19
3.13.2 Inserting a Table of Contents..........19
3.13.3 Methods..........................................20
3.14 The Head area......................................20
3.15 Page views............................................20
3.16 Editing in Source view..........................20
3.17 Selecting items – Reprise......................21
4 Style and stylesheets............................22
4.1 Introduction to style...............................22
4.1.1 Power of styles..................................22
4.1.2 Classes.............................................22
4.1.3 Using style........................................22
4.2 Creating styles.......................................23
4.2.1 Internal styles...................................23
4.2.2 Styling multiple elements..................26
4.2.3 Named Classes.................................26
4.2.4 External styles..................................27
4.2.5 Other style selectors.........................28
4.3 Removing styles......................................29
4.4 Inheritance.............................................29
4.5 The division <div> element.....................29
4.5.1 Creating divs....................................29
4.5.2 Styles within a div............................30
4.5.3 Creating a layer using a div...............30
5 Scripts.....................................................30
6 Inserts.....................................................31
7 Templates................................................32
7.1 What are templates?...............................32
7.2 Create a new template............................32
7.3 Saving templates....................................32
7.4 Create a template from a page................32
7.5 Setting up template details.....................32
7.6 Using templates......................................33
7.7 Editing templates...................................33
8 Site Manager...........................................34
8.1 Overview................................................34
8.2 Setting up sites......................................34
8.3 Site Manager Functions..........................34
8.4 Remote sites...........................................34
9 Setting preferences..................................35
9.1 Preferences.............................................35
9.2 Editing preferences.................................35
9.3 Toolbars.................................................37
10 Publishing..............................................39
10.1 Introduction.........................................39
10.2 Validating the site................................39
10.2.1 Markup Cleaner..............................39
10.2.2 Browser testing...............................39
10.2.3 Formal validation............................39
10.3 Publishing............................................39
10.3.1 Setting up your site........................39
10.3.2 Uploading.......................................40
Contents
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 4
Appendix 1 – Glossary.................................41
Appendix 2 – References.............................42
Appendix 3 – Doctypes................................42
A3.1 Introduction.........................................42
A3.2 Doctypes supported..............................42
A3.3 Differences between transitional and
strict DTD....................................................42
A3.4 Choice of language and DTD................42
A3.5 KompoZer capability.............................43
A3.6 Browser responses...............................43
Appendix 4 Installing KompoZer and exten-
sions...........................................................44
A4.1 Installing KompoZer.............................44
A4.2 Reinstalling/updating..........................44
A4.3 Installing extensions............................44
A4.4 Managing profiles.................................44
Appendix 5 – Revision History....................46
Appendix 6 – Character Encoding...............47
A6.1 Introduction.........................................47
A6.2 Quick start...........................................47
A6.3 Encoding text.......................................47
A6.3.1 ASCII and Latin 1 characters..........47
A6.3.2 ISO-8859........................................47
A6.3.3 Universal Character Set..................47
A6.3.4 Character Encoding........................48
A6.3.5 Character references.......................48
A6.3.6 UTF encodings................................49
A6.3.7 Symbols.........................................49
A6.3.8 Unicode support.............................49
A6.3.8.1 Fonts...........................................49
A6.4 Special characters................................50
A6.4.1 Entities or numeric character refer-
ences.........................................................50
A6.4.2 Encoding in attribute values...........51
A6.5 URL encoding.......................................51
A6.5.1 Percentage encoding.......................51
A6.5.2 Don't encode special chars in at-
tribute values............................................52
A6.6 References............................................52
Appendix 7 - Making pages Printable..........53
A7.1 Preliminary..........................................53
A7.1.1 Introduction...................................53
A7.1.2 Printer style sheets.........................53
A7.1.3 Media types....................................53
A7.2 Styles for printing.................................53
A7.2.1 Dimensions....................................54
A7.2.2 Selections.......................................54
A7.2.3 Page media.....................................55
A7.3 Getting results.....................................55
A7.3.1 The right order...............................55
A7.3.2 Inline styles....................................55
A7.3.3 Images, Floats and page breaks......55
A7.3.4 Browsers........................................56
A7.3.5 Development aid.............................56
A7.4 References............................................56
Index..........................................................57
Postscript...................................................58
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 5
1 Introduction
1.1 What is KompoZer?
KompoZer is a complete Web Authoring System
which integrates web page development and web file
management.
KompoZer is basically the same product as Nvu but
has been developed further removing some of the
faults found in Nvu and improving the user interface.
It provides a web page editor which has a simple
graphical (WYSIWYG - what you see is what you get)
interface. With KompoZer, newcomers will quickly and
easily be able to produce new web pages.
Alternative editing ‘views’ of the pages are provided
right down to detailed code level.
The output code is compliant to a high extent with
the latest issues of the appropriate web language
specifications and pages may be checked for validity
directly from Nvu using the official W3C validator.
KompoZer incorporates a Site Manager; this gives
rapid access to the files on both local machines and
remote servers. It can cater for several sites and switch
rapidly between them.
From within KompoZer pages and associated files
may be uploaded to a remote server.
KompoZer supports the use of “Styles” through
Cascading Style sheets (CSS) both embedded and
external. It has an editor which generates CSS code
conforming with CSS 2.1 specifications.
1.2 Who is KompoZer for?
KompoZer is suitable for anyone wishing to have a
modern, free of charge, program for developing small
web sites and who would like to learn modern web
design techniques such as the use of CSS.
1.3 Scope of the guide
The guide has been written from the point of view
of the Windows Operating system so details may differ
for other systems. It is intended as a reference docu-
ment although in a few places it uses a tutorial ap-
proach.
Although web pages can appear on screen, in print
or in audio the emphasis in this guide is on-screen
uses.
1.4 Methodology
The approach taken by the guide attempts to satis-
fy the needs both of the comparative novice who has
little knowledge of web design tools, and those making
the transition from other tools and who may have
considerable knowledge of the field.
Although the Guide is not intended for the com-
plete beginner, concepts are introduced progressively
and gradually added to. To avoid being too repetitive I
have, in a number of places, referred to subjects yet to
come. This applies, in particular to the use of styles in
which KompoZer is strong. I suggest that these refer-
ences are disregarded at first reading and returned to
later. This will not prevent understanding later parts.
1.5 Navigation
Navigate around the ten sections of the Guide and
the appendices using the menu pane on the left hand
side. In each section the menu expands to show more
detail within that section. Cross references throughout
are hyperlinked.
The buttons at the top of each page give access to
some supplementary aids and information. The ‘Site
map’ contains a detailed table of contents of the whole
guide while the ‘Quick index’ gives access by subject.
[This pdf version of the Guide lacks these facilities
but compensates by having a comprehensive subject
index.]
1.6 KompoZer and Nvu
The development of Nvu was completed with the
release of version 1 in June 2005. No further develop-
ment is expected though the developer Daniel Glaz-
man of Disruptive Innovations
http://disruptive-innovations.com/ is working on a
newer product which will probably supersede it. After
version 1 release a number of shortcomings were
revealed and an independent developer using the
name of Kazé worked on several of these and released
an enhanced product as KompoZer.
Early versions of KompoZer operated almost identi-
cally to Nvu but with version 0.7.10 a number of
significant enhancements were introduced, most of
them related to the use of the CSS editor CaScadeS,
and the majority of Nvu users have probably trans-
ferred to using this version.
The program is completely free and can be
downloaded from KompoZers web site
http://kompozer.sourceforge.net/.
You can install both Nvu and KompoZer on the
same machine. From version 0.7.10 it is possible and
safe to run both programs simultaneously.
This User Guide is written around the latest ver-
sion of KompoZer at time of writing (see footer).
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 6
2 Quick start
2.1 Preliminary
Open KompoZer
The main window opens. At the top are a number
of toolbars. The topmost is the Menu Bar. This carries
a number of items (File, Edit etc) used to make selec-
tions. The next is the ‘Composition Toolbar’ which
carries a number of ‘Buttons’ labelled ‘New’, ‘Open’ etc.
2.2 To create a new page:
On the Composition toolbar Click the ‘New’ button.
2.3 To open an existing page
Assuming that the page is stored on your local disk
in HTML format:
On the menu Bar click ‘File’ then ‘Open File’.
Browse to the file and click ‘Open’.
2.4 Editing a web page
Your web page - blank or otherwise - is in the large
pane in the centre right of the KompoZer application
window. Many editing functions are very similar to
those in a word processor. The top four toolbars on the
KompoZer application window provide a number of
editing functions to see what any do hover the cursor
over an item and a hint will appear.
2.5 Saving a Page
To save a page:
On the Composition toolbar click ‘Save’.
If it was a new document a dialog window will ask
you to enter a title for the page. This will appear in the
tab at the top of the page display area. NB this is NOT
the file name. Click ‘OK’; you will then be offered a
normal save window which allows you to browse to a
suitable location and name the file. The file extension
offered will be HTML.
2.6 Browsing a page
To see how your page will look in your default
browser on the Composition toolbar click ‘Browse’.
2.7 Help
The help system should be a first resort in case of
need.
The forum at http://wysifauthoring.informe.com/
is a place for sharing experiences and obtaining and
giving help. Many of the contributors are users of the
programs and range from beginners to those with lots
of experience.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 7
3 Using KompoZer
3.1 Finding your way around
When KompoZer starts the window carries a menu
bar across the top (File, Edit, View etc). Below this are
three ‘Toolbars’. To ensure that everything is visible,
on the Menu bar select View > Show/Hide and see that
each of the following is checked: Composition Toolbar,
Format Toolbar 1, Format Toolbar 2, Edit Mode Tool-
bar, Status bar, Rulers, Site Manager.
The three toolbars across the top of the window
carry buttons (represented by icons). Hover on any to
find its function. If any are greyed out they are not
functional in the current mode as they are context
sensitive.
Note Not all buttons are installed initially. The
full list is given in section 9.3 Customising tool-
bars
Across the centre of the window are two panes: the
‘Site Manager’ on the left and a blank web page on the
right. The Site Manager is a powerful tool which is
covered in section 8. Since it is not needed yet it may
be closed by clicking on its close button or pressing F9.
At the top of the Page area there is a Page tab which
carries the name of the page (‘Untitled’). (KompoZer
Help refers to this as the ‘Tab Browser’ toolbar.) If you
had several pages open, as shown in the figure, this
tab would allow you to select one them rapidly.
At the bottom of the page area is the ‘Edit Mode
Toolbar’ which carries four tabs which select one of
four ‘Viewing modes’ for a page (‘Normal’, ‘HTML Tags’,
‘Source’, ‘Preview’.)
For details of viewing modes see section 3.15.
At the bottom of the window is the ‘Status Bar’.
This is a very powerful tool. Once a page is populated,
by clicking any item in the page area its structure
appears on the status bar. Any class or id applied to
an element is shown and any bearing an inline style is
indicated in italic type. Hovering reveals the style
declaration. Additionally clicking an element marker
highlights the element in both normal view and, on
changing view, in source view thus simplifying naviga-
tion in source view.
Note The figure shows the buttons as they
appear when KompoZer is first installed. They
may be customised to different arrangements
(see section 9.3). If this has been done some of
the following may be difficult to follow. To re-
store defaults click View > Show/Hide > Cus-
tomize Toolbar > Main Toolbar > Restore Default
Set and repeat similarly for the Format Toolbar.
Using KompoZer right-click any toolbar to custom-
ise it.
3.2 Starting a page
A new page can be created either from a blank page
or by opening any pre-existing page.
Note There are often several ways of getting
KompoZer to do something. This guide will use
the button on the Composition toolbar if that is
available. For menu equivalents see section 9.3
Menu alternatives
3.2.1 Document types (Doctype)
Web pages use the Hypertext Markup Language
(HTML). There are number of variants of the basic
language some details of which are outlined in Appen-
dix 3. KompoZer is capable of creating and editing four
variants but for simplicity of explanation I recom-
mend that users create the Strict HTML variant. I
also recommend that you go the menu item Tools
> Options > General and check the box ‘Use CSS
Styles instead of HTML Elements ...’ this will give
you the maximum functionality. You can edit docu-
KompoZer Screen layout
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 8
ments which have been originated in other variants
and again ‘Use CSS Styles ...’ gives maximum func-
tionality.
Note If you find a button or menu item disabled
it is likely to be a because ‘Use CSS Styles ...’ is
not set but could be because of the context of
the action.
3.2.2 Options for starting a page
There are several ways to start new pages or open
existing ones.
To start a new blank page.
On the menu bar click File > New.
A window headed ‘Create a new document or tem-
plate’ appears. Check the boxes ‘A blank document’
and ‘Strict DTD’ and clear ‘create a XHTML document’.
(Without Strict DTD checked the document would
have Transitional DTD.)
Note If you wish to make these your defaults
which are offered every time you create a new
page click Tools > Options > Advanced and
check the boxes Markup Language: ‘HTML 4’
and DTD: ‘Strict’.
The use of templates is covered in section 7.
To open an existing page.
Either:
1. Click the OPEN button to access a normal
browse dialogue.
2. Click File > Recent Pages to get rapid access to
those recently worked on.
3. Or use the Site Manager (section 8) which pro-
vides a powerful mini-browser and is very easily set up.
The Doctype of an existing page will remain the
same as before it was opened. It cannot be changed in
KompoZer.
Each page opened starts in a new tab which can be
clicked to select a document to work on.
3.3 Editing in KompoZer
KompoZer supports all the standard Windows edit-
ing commands and short-
cut keys. e.g. Copy Ctrl+C,
Paste Ctrl+V etc. There are
other KompoZer specifics.
These are great time sav-
ers.
In ‘HTML Tags’ view
KompoZer supports drag and drop editing for block
items. (Select an item by pressing the Control key
while clicking on the Tag.)
An extreme time saver is KompoZer's double click
response. In several cases, such as links, images and
tables, a very useful editing window is opened.
KompoZer supports many levels of Undo and Redo,
however changes made in ‘Source’ view cannot be
undone after you have changed the view.
3.3.1 Tutorial - Brief introduction to HTML
HTML stands for Hypertext Markup Language. It is
the publishing language of the World Wide Web on
which KompoZer is based. Ideally it should be possible
to use KompoZer without any knowledge of this lan-
guage and certainly without a knowledge of the details.
As a precaution however a limited understanding is
desirable. This tutorial covers a minimum of detail
while introducing some useful features of KompoZer.
Start a new blank page as described above.
On the status bar click on the ‘<> Source’ tab. You
will see a number of terms enclosed within angle <>
brackets. These are HTML Tags’. Everything starting
from the <body> and finishing with </body> will ap-
pear on your web page.
Note In most cases tags occur in pairs - opening
tags and closing tags - Closing tags always start
with a forward slash.
All the page consists of now is a <br> tag which is
a line break and which is, of course, invisible.
Later as a page builds up many more tags will be
added. For the most part the pairs of tags enclose
‘contents’ from which the page is built up - items like
Paragraphs, Headings, Tables, Images. The tags plus
the contents are called ‘elements’. The tag names are
usually either the same as element names or abbrevi-
ations of them. Some examples are ‘table’, ‘img’ for
image, ‘p’ for paragraph, 'br' for line break (which is
unusual in having no closing tag).
Nothing between the <head> and </head> tags will
appear on the screen but may have quite useful func-
tions nonetheless. For instance, between the <title>
and </title> tags there isn't anything. Go for it, be-
tween them type “My first page” or something like that.
Click the tab for ‘Normal’ view, now the tab at the top
carries your page title and you've edited raw HTML.
Well done!
If you were too timid to do this all is not lost. There
is no need to use source view at all. Go to Format >
Page Title and Properties, here you can enter various
parameters including the title and the language you
are writing in. These will be entered in the HEAD area
for you. In some circumstances they can be important;
the Title and Description, for instance, can be used by
search engines to index the page.
Back to '<> Source'. Notice the first tag is <html>
and the last </html>. All web pages must carry these
in these positions. Actual-
ly the case doesn't matter
for any tag though it's
good practice to use lower
case. (For XHTML lower
case is mandatory.)
The first line, in a dif-
ferent colour, specifies the
Doctype’. This is a refer-
ence to the type of HTML
document. KompoZer de-
termines the Doctype ac-
cording to the options
selected on starting a page.
Finally, give the docu-
ment a name and save it.
3.3.2 Saving files
Go to File > Save as.
You are offered a Save
Page as’ window which al-
lows you to browse to the
folder you want to use.
You will find the file name
already completed with
your page title. You will
probably want to change
Tip: The plus sign (+)
means that you must
press two keys surround-
ing the plus sign at the
same time.
Tip: Filenames should
generally be composed of
unaccented letters, num-
bers and the underscore
character. Some others
are permissible but the
rules for incorporating
them are more complex.
Tip: Web pages are
stored (hosted) on serv-
ers which usually run ei-
ther a version of Windows
or UNIX operating sys-
tems. UNIX filenames are
case-sensitive while Win-
dows are not. For this rea-
son if you use mixed
cases in filenames you
must be very rigorous. A
site which runs perfectly
in your local Windows en-
vironment or on a host
running Windows if trans-
ferred to a UNIX system
might require extensive
and time-consuming
changes.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 9
this to a shorter, all lower case, name (but you don't
have to). You will find the file extension completed as
‘html’ you may prefer to, and may alter it to “htm”.
Note If you have hidden extensions for file types
this becomes unavailable. Hide or view exten-
sions is controlled in Windows by Control Panel
> Folder options > View then scroll down and
clear ‘Hide extensions for known file types’.
After you edit files you need to re-save periodically.
Click the ‘Save’ button.
Note KompoZer includes a small red warning
icon in the page tab to indicate if a page has not
been saved.
There is nothing mysterious about the files. The
curious may open the file using any text editor e.g.
Windows notepad. What you will see will look just like
the HTML Source code you've been looking at in
'Source' view. This shows that the source is just a
simple text document.
3.3.3 Printing pages
The ‘Print’ button allows you to print the
current page to a printer. This prints the page
view and not the source code.
3.4 Working with text
3.4.1 Text on a page
3.4.1.1 Introduction
Text typed directly onto the KompoZer page de-
faults to appearing in the format for the ‘Body’ ele-
ment. HTML defines a small number of elements
specifically for text and it is usually preferable to use
these.
To format text in a standard element format select
the text (it is actually necessary simply to click any-
where within the block of text) and click the first
drop-down box on the format toolbar. This offers a
selection of standard text formats. Paragraph is the
most appropriate for general text.
Once formatted as a paragraph, when typing in a
text area, use of the 'enter' key starts a new block of
text i.e. a paragraph. To start a new line within the
current paragraph press Shift+Enter; this generates a
line break.
Note This is the default action and can be
altered. (See Toolbars section 9.3)
Other standard text formats are Heading formats
from Heading 1, the largest (for the main heading), to
Heading 6, the smallest (for the least significant).
Browsers generally render headings in bold type.
Text can be edited in any of the viewing modes and
KompoZer responds to all the normal windows short-
cut commands.
3.4.1.2 Block or Inline
The elements just de-
scribed mark out ‘blocks’
of text.
Blocks usually begin
on a new line.
Blocks have gaps
above and below con-
trolled by margins
(see section 4.2.1.4).
Vertical margins ‘collapse’ i.e. The larger margin is
applied the smaller is ignored.
Within blocks it is possible to mark out sections of
‘inline’ text.
Inline text does not usually start a new line.
3.4.2 Formatting text
Text can be formatted in a number of ways using a
format toolbar. The changes listed in the table can be
applied (hover over a tool to discover what it does).
Choose a font *
Choose text colour * Choose background colour *
Choose highlight colour *
Make text smaller * Make text larger *
Embolden * Italicise * Underline *
Format as a numbered list Format as a bulleted list
Align left Align Centre Align right Justify
Indent text Outdent text
Emphasise * Strongly emphasise *
Note 1 For the options marked with an asterisk
select an inline section of text. This allows you
to have a few words in a paragraph of a different
size etc. (When you do this, if you use the ‘HTML
Tags’ view, you will see the start of the change
marked with a ‘Span’ marker.)
Note 2 ‘Choose background color’ sets the col-
our for the background of the current block. If
‘Use CSS Styles …’ is not checked it has no effect.
Note 3 The emphasis button will result in itali-
cised text with most browsers and the strong
emphasis button in bold text.
Warning. When using Strict Doctype check 'Use
CSS styles instead of HTML elements and at-
tributes' in Tools > Options > General to ensure
availability of all options.
3.4.3 Positioning text
Generally the position of text is determined by the
fact that one block flows on after the previous one etc.
The space between blocks is determined by the
browser. Through the use of styles (see section 4.2.1.4)
these settings can be altered.
Paragraph and heading blocks stretch from one
side of the screen to the other. This a very elegant way
of operating. Try resizing the KompoZer window. Until
it becomes so narrow that nothing can fit, the text
reformats so that it still fits – though narrower it
becomes longer. It is fundamental to the way the web
operates that it is designed for information transmis-
sion and not presentation. Web design tools allow us
Tip: The outline of each
block of text can be re-
vealed by selecting View >
Block outline. The dimen-
sions of each block in pixels
are shown on the rulers at
the top and side of the page.
Tip: Text to be formatted may be selected in one of
several ways.
Simply place the cursor anywhere in a block. Where the
formatting desired can only apply to a complete block this
is sufficient.
Double-click within a block to select a word.
Triple click within a block to select a line of text.
Drag across a section of text to highlight and select that
section only.
In HTML Tags view press the Control key while clicking
on the tag for the block to select the complete block.
Using the status bar. See section 3.17
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 10
to refine presentation but, if we over constrain it, we
may run into problems of getting it to fit on the screen.
We really should allow the browser as much freedom
as possible.
3.4.3.1 Fixed width text
KompoZer allows you to constrain the width of
paragraphs. (The same applies to headings.) Try this.
Set the window size so that it is somewhat narrower
than the full screen width i.e. so that you have space
either to narrow it more or to widen it.
Take two longish but similar paragraphs which fill
about half of the window. Click in one, you will see the
rulers both across the top and down the side. Grab the
left edge of the ruler and draw it half way across the
window. Do the same for the other paragraph but take
the right edge of the ruler and drag it half way to the
centre but in the opposite direction.
You probably think that you've achieved a rather
elegant layout and discovered a flexible tool. Drag the
window to be wider then narrower. Do you still think
so? What you have done is to set the text to be in a
fixed position and of fixed width. It no longer re-flows.
Consider that visitors who view your pages may have
smallish or very large screens. Will they all see what
you want them to?
Supposing that you don't like what you have just
done you can just Undo it press the Undo button
or click Ctrl+Z. However if you leave it to later you
would first have to undo all later work. You can re- or
de-format a paragraph directly and individually. This
allows you precise control
rather than relying on
dragging the ruler. Go to
‘HTML Tags’ view, click on
the yellow ‘p’ marker for a
paragraph, on the status
bar right-click on the high-
lighted ‘p’ area and select
‘Inline styles’. In the gener-
al tab that appears just
delete the text and click
‘OK’. Alternatively select
‘Box Properties’. This allows precise editing of the
paragraph within the ‘box’ in which it is contained.
3.4.4 Lists
3.4.4.1 Numbered and Bulleted lists
KompoZer can format a list of items giving each
item a sequential number in any of several formats
(HTML calls these ordered lists <ol>) or presenting
them bulleted (unordered lists <ul>).
To start a list from scratch
1 Click one of the list buttons (Numbered List or
Bulleted list) on the Format toolbar.
2 Type the first item.
3 Press Enter and type the next item.
4 To finish, on the last (blank) item press
Enter.
To change existing text into a list
1 Select the text required.
2 Click one of the list buttons on the Format
Toolbar.
The text will be changed into a list, a new item
starting for each paragraph or other block item en-
countered.
To add items to a list
1 Click at the end of the last item in the list.
2 Press Enter and type the new item.
Numbering and format will continue from the pre-
vious item.
3.4.4.2 Formatting lists
To change the formatting for a list click in the list
and, on the menu bar, select Format > List > List
properties and choose the preferred option. Alterna-
tively List properties is accessible by right-clicking in
the list.
For numbered lists the numbering style may be
selected, for bulleted lists the type of bullet may be
changed.
3.4.4.3 Nesting lists
Lists can be nested.
To start a new level of list within an existing list
1 Click at the end of the line preceding the new
list to be generated.
2 Press Shift+Enter.
3 Click a list button on the format toolbar.
4 Type the content of each list item followed by
Enter.
Each level of list in a nested set may have either the
same or different format which may be set as above.
KompoZer sets no format by default. Browsers normal-
ly by default render all numbered lists with decimal
number format but each level of bulleted lists using a
different bullet symbol.
3.4.5 More formatting
The menu selection FORMAT offers many ways of
formatting text. In some cases you can simply click
within the text region in others you must select the
section of text involved. Some of the effects may be
repeated several times for more effect, some will re-
verse on a second application.
The options offered include indenting text.
Those unfamiliar with web design may look, in
vain, for a tab option. HTML does not support
tabs although the List feature does produce a tabbed
effect. KompoZer substitutes for this in that pressing
the Tab key introduces several spaces - of course these
do not produce the alignment effects that real tabbing
would. The spaces introduced by the Tab key are
technically known as non-breaking spaces. Pressing
the space bar more than once also introduces non-
breaking spaces.
3.4.6 Importing text
Strictly KompoZer does not support importing text
from other applications but it is possible to copy and
paste text.
In normal view content from other web pages may
be copied reliably. The result will be rendered accord-
ing to any styling applied in your document; any
reliance on external styles in the original document
will be lost. See section 4 for more on styles.
Text from word processors such as Microsoft Word
or OpenOffice.org in rtf or doc format or from text
editors such as Windows notepad may also be copied
and pasted.
When such text is pasted into KompoZer most
formatting is lost.
Numbered lists will be retained.
Tip: Instead of using
HTML Tags view it is
quicker just to click in the
paragraph and click the
corresponding <p> mark-
er on the status bar. This
will highlight the para-
graph. After that just right
click as described.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 11
Tabs will be rendered as three non-breaking spaces.
The contents of tables may be pasted, individual
cells will be separated as if by tabs.
Warning Word processor data should be copied
in .doc or .rtf form. Word processors can also
save pages in html form but this is unsatisfac-
tory because the code is of poor quality. It will
be almost impossible to alter the formats in
KompoZer. To use such code first copy to a text
editor, which removes all formatting, and then
copy from the text editor to KompoZer. Apply
any required formats from scratch.
3.4.7 Special characters
By special characters we refer to characters which
do not have an equivalent keyboard key. HTML uses
a system of characters known as 'Unicode'. This
includes a large range of characters including all the
international currency symbols and many thousands
of others, though the fonts supplied on computers
will support only a subset. A number of the more
common, including accented ones, may be inserted
using Insert > Characters and Symbols.
KompoZer does not directly support ‘smart quotes’
but text which has been copied from applications like
Microsoft Word or OpenOffice.org which include smart
quotes will retain these details and they will be cor-
rectly rendered in browsers.
If you need a character which is unobtainable by
these methods there are several alternatives available.
1 Using the Windows Character Map - Find, copy
and paste a character.
2 Directly from the keyboard – while pressing the
ALT key input a zero followed by the three digit
decimal code for the character. This code is
shown for a number of characters at the bottom
right of the Windows Character Map.
3 By editing the file in Source view. See section
3.16. Characters may be inserted either using
the decimal code for the character or using a
mnemonic ‘entity’. Precede the decimal code
with &# and the entity with & and follow both
with a semicolon. Use no spaces. The HTML
specification (see appendix 2) in section 24 lists
the codes.
Some useful examples are shown in the box.
There is more on special characters in appendix 6
sections A6.3.7 and A6.3.8
Character Entity Decimal
nrule &ndash; &#8211;
mrule &mdash; &#8212;
ellipsis ... &hellip; &#8230;
left single quote &lsquo; &#8216;
right single quote &rsquo; &#8217;
left double quote &ldquo; &#8220;
right double quote &rdquo; &#8221;
infinity &infin; &#8734;
tilde ˜ &tilde; &#732;
capital Alpha &Alpha; &#913;
lower case alpha &alpha; &#945;
and so on for other Greek letters
3.4.8 Checking spelling
Simplicity itself. In any view, other than
Source, click on the ‘Spell’ button. The spell
checker will work sequentially through the page.
You will be offered one dictionary but you can add
your own words to it. If the Spell button is not installed
see Section 9.3
By first highlighting a section of a page only that
section will be checked.
It is also possible to run the spell checker all the
time. Any mis-spelled words underlined in red. To set
this option on the Menu Bar select Tools > Options. In
the window which opens select the ‘Advanced’ button
and set ‘Underline misspelled words’ - OK.
Warning This setting must be made after the
page is opened. Otherwise cancel and re-set.
Note Spell checking uses enormous processor
resources. Open only one document at a time
when spell checking. When working on long
documents, if your system grinds to a halt,
disable this when not required.
3.4.8.1 Custom dictionaries
If you add words to the spell checker you create a
custom dictionary. The spell checker will mark words
as errors if they do not appear in either the standard
or custom dictionaries. The custom dictionary is saved
as a text file as persdict.dat in the chrome folder in
your profiles folder. Refer to Appendix 4.2 for the
location of profiles.
3.4.8.2 Installing other dictionaries
If you use a language other than that of the default
dictionary or prefer a dictionary customised to regional
spellings it is possible to install alternatives to cater for
this.
With alternative dictionaries installed you can se-
lect which to use.
To select a dictionary.
1 Click the ‘Spell’ button.
2 In the ‘Check spelling’ window that opens click
the drop down arrow in the ‘Language’ box.
3 Select the language required.
The language selected will become the default until
intentionally changed.
Spelling will use this selected dictionary plus any
custom dictionary.
If you have more than one profile in use the diction-
ary settings must be made, as required, for each
profile. You can find details of profiles in Appendix 4.2.
Acquiring dictionaries
Dictionaries may be available from a variety of
sources one of which is at
http://dictionaries.mozdev.org/installation.html
Dictionaries are formatted with xpi extensions.
To acquire a dictionary first identify a source then
1. Open the source page in a browser.
2. Right click on the file.
3. Click ‘Save link as’.
4. Navigate to a suitable folder (any will do)
5. Click ‘Save’.
To install a new dictionary
1. Click Tools > Extensions > Install.
2. The ‘Select an extension to install’ window opens.
3. Navigate to the location where the xpi file has
been saved, select it and click ‘Open’.
4. The ‘Software installation’ window opens.
5. Click ‘Install now’.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 12
When the Spell Checker is next called the new
dictionary appears in the drop down list.
[I AM GRATEFUL TO GREG AND ELENORA ON THE WYSIFA FORUM
FOR MUCH OF THE ABOVE DETAIL.]
3.4.9 Viewing text
The main page editing pane acts rather like a
browser in that the text size may be viewed at different
magnifications (this has nothing to do with the code
for the final page). Set this using View > Text Zoom.
This has no effect in Source view.
3.5 Working with images
With KompoZer it is easy to insert images on to
your page. Browsers accept images in three formats
'gif', 'jpg' or 'png'. You may have to use a graphics
package to get your image into a suitable format. You
can insert an image located anywhere on your compu-
ter but, for the sake of order, it is a good idea to locate
any images which you intend to use either in the same
folder (directory) as your page document or in a sub-
folder of this.
3.5.1 Inserting images
Warning Before inserting an image save your
page. Otherwise KompoZer will have difficulty in
referencing where your image is located.
As an exercise set your cursor in the middle of the
paragraph, perhaps at the start of a sentence.
To insert an image
1 Click the ‘Image’ button on the Composi-
tion toolbar
2 The Image properties window opens. Click
‘Choose File’ and browse and select a file
3 Click ‘Open’. Leave checked the box URL is
relative to page location’ this will allow you to
move the page and image to another location, as
you will have to when you upload them to a
server. (If you de-select this and move the page,
it will try to find the image at the original loca-
tion.)
Note If the box is ‘greyed out’ this is probably
because the page has not been saved.
4 In the box labelled ‘Alternate text’ add a descrip-
tion of the image. (This forms the ‘alt’ attribute
for the image and provides text which will ap-
pear in place of the image with user agents
(browsers) that cannot display images (screen
readers and voice synthesisers). It will also be
used by those with visual impairment. The
content of this box must be carefully considered
so as to be of maximum assistance in such
cases.)
Note Where the image is purely decorative, and
not necessary to understanding the page, alter-
native text is not required and should be omitted
5 In the box labelled ‘Tooltip’ you may optionally
insert a ‘Title’ attribute for the image. Some
browsers will show the text provided when the
cursor hovers over the image
6 Click OK
3.5.2 Positioning and resizing images
You should see the image inserted into the middle
of the paragraph. Maybe it has come out some ridicu-
lous size. Click the image. A sizing box appears around
the image. The box has 8 graphical handles (small
white squares) one at each corner of the image and one
in the middle of each side).
Drag on a handle to alter the size of the image.
Make it some sensible size. Dragging a handle in the
centre of a side will alter the shape of the image which
is usually undesirable.
More precise control may be achieved via the Image
properties window described after the note. Select the
‘dimensions’ tab.
Note Ideally images should be produced at the
size required rather than resizing them. Import-
ing large images and reducing the size wastes
bandwidth and slows presentation. Resizing by
small amounts can introduce undesirable arte-
facts.
Images in the middle of paragraphs are not usually
what is needed. You can place them at either the right
or left side and have the text wrap round.
To align an image
1 Click on the image.
2 Click the Image but-
ton on the Composi-
tion toolbar: this
will open the Image
properties box.
3 Select the ‘Appear-
ance’ tab
4 In the drop down
box ‘Align text to
image’ select the re-
quired alignment.
5 Click OK
Try the various options.
The text starting from
where the image is insert-
ed will wrap around the image.
You may prefer the complete paragraph to wrap.
Click on the image and drag the cursor to the start of
the paragraph, or anywhere else. Moving images is
easy!
You may find the first three options confusing.
They refer to the position of the text relative to the
image NOT the image relative to the text. Specifically
you will find no way of putting an image in the middle
of the page with text wrapping around it.
Note This type of presentation, common enough
in print, is almost impossible to achieve using
HTML even with full use of styles.
You may decide that the image is too close to the
text, that you would like more space around it. Again
‘Image Properties’ allows this. On the ‘Appearance’ tab
set ‘Spacing’ Top and Bottom and/or Left and Right as
required. You can also put a border of selected width
around a image. The border will be the same colour as
the adjacent text.
An alternative way of aligning an image is to apply
a style via a class as explained in sections 4.2.1.4 and
4.2.3.
3.6 Using tables
Tables allow data – images, links, forms, form
fields, text, etc. to be arranged into rows and col-
umns of cells.
A table is basically a rectangular grid forming an
array of boxes into which the data are placed. The
Tip: The method de-
scribed places the image
within a paragraph. You
may prefer to place the
image directly in the body
area particularly if you are
familiar with using styles
and want to control the
image that way. You can
get directly to the body
using the method de-
scribed in the tip in section
3.16.
Then just insert the image.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 13
rules, between cells, and the border, around the out-
side of the table, may be either visible or invisible. The
boxes are called ‘cells' and may be coloured. The grid
layout does not have to be regular - the first row may
have one cell the second four, the third three; however,
when first inserted, it will always be regular.
W3C recommends:
Tables should not be used purely as a means to
layout document content as this may present
problems when rendering to non-visual media.
Additionally, when used with graphics, these
tables may force users to scroll horizontally to
view a table designed on a system with a larger
display. To minimise these problems, authors
should use style sheets to control layout rather
than tables. (HTML 4.01 Specification Section
11.1)
3.6.1 Inserting tables
To insert a table
1 On the Composition Toolbar click the Ta-
ble button. The ‘Insert table’ window ap-
pears
2 Leave the ‘Quickly’ tab selected and drag out a
matrix then click the bottom right cell to define
the table arrangement
3 The cells appear on the screen with narrow
outlines
Note If later the table border is set to zero these
outlines disappear but KompoZer in normal
view replaces them with a red outline. This does
not appear in Preview or in a browser.
Tables have resizing boxes similar to those used
with images.
Alternatively for more control
1 On the Composition Toolbar click the Table
button. The ‘Insert table’ window appears
2 Click the ‘Precisely’ tab
3 Specify the number of rows and columns re-
quired
4 Specify the width of
the table either in
pixels or as a per-
centage of window
size. Alternatively
clear the ‘width'
box. This will give
‘fluid' width which
will automatically
adjust to the con-
tents
5 If a border is re-
quired around the
table enter the
width in pixels otherwise enter ‘0’. If a border is
specified each cell will also have a border but
narrow
Note CSS styles give fuller control of borders.
See section 4.2.1.3.
For more options
Right-click the table and select ‘Table Cell proper-
ties'. The Table properties window opens. This has two
tabs ‘Table' and ‘Cells' which allow overall control of
several aspects of either the table or individual cells.
This includes
a Alignment of text within cells
b Wrapping of text
c Cell spacing – the gap between cells
d Cell padding the gap between the edge of the
cell and the text within it
e Size of table and cells
f Background colour
g Selection of cells as ‘Normal’ or ‘Header’ (Cells
which are headings to rows or columns should be
selected as ‘Header’. Normally this results in
them being rendered in bold type.)
3.6.2 Formatting tables
3.6.2.1 Table size
Tables at full window width give the maximum
available space for data. The width accommodates to
screen or window size.
It is possible to set the width to a smaller percent-
age of window size or to a fixed size in pixels. Fixed
sized tables are inflexible in use and could result in the
user having to scroll horizontally to read the content
so must be used with caution. It is also possible to
leave the width unspecified. This is likely to result in
the best presentation as the browser will set the width
to the optimal value.
To adjust table size, with the cursor in the table,
click the table button (or double-click the table). In the
Table Properties window select the ‘Table’ tab. The
width can be set either as a percentage of window
width or in pixels. To leave it unspecified clear any
number in the width box.
It is possible to adjust the size of a table using the
sizing boxes. When you do this the size is specified in
pixels.
3.6.2.2 Colouring, adding deleting and merging
cells, rows and columns
Right-Click in a table or cell and several menu
options appear which allow the table or cell to be
formatted as desired. Some of the options are context
sensitive.
‘Table or cell background color’ allows the colour of
the complete table or any cell to be set.
‘Table Insert’ provides means of adding rows, col-
umns, individual cells or even tables into a cell.
‘Table delete’ provides the opposite.
A cell can be joined with the cell on its right, thus
merging two cells. Virgin cells cannot be split but
joined cells can.
If adjacent cells (whether within a row or column)
are selected together they can be joined.
Each cell, when clicked, reveals a set of six manip-
ulation symbols (triangles and circles with x inside),
these provide a rapid method of inserting or deleting
rows and columns of cells as shown in the figure.
Setting
the cell back-
ground col-
our for
adjacent
cells to a
dark colour
reveals gaps
between the
cells.
This may
be convenient if the cells are to be filled with text as it
avoids two items of text abutting each other.
Tip. Once you have creat-
ed a table using the
‘Precisely’ tab any table
created subsequently us-
ing the ‘Quickly’ tab will
default to using the same
width and border.
If you delete the content of
the width box the table will
be created without a de-
fined width. This setting
will not however persist to
tables created later.
Manipulation symbols for tables
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 14
At other times it is a problem. The gap is controlled
by the ‘Cellspacing’ attribute.
3.6.2.3 Background images
It is possible to set a background image for a table
or cell.
The CSS Specification in section 14.2.1 recom-
mends
When setting a background image, authors
should also specify a background color that will
be used when the image is unavailable. When the
image is available, it is rendered on top of the
background color. (Thus, the color is visible in the
transparent parts of the image).
The image appears behind the contents of the
table. If the image is larger than the table the table is
unaffected i.e. does not grow to accommodate the
image, as much of the image as will fit is displayed. If
the image is smaller than the table several options are
offered e.g. the image may be centred or tiled horizon-
tally, or vertically or in both directions until it fills the
table.
To apply a background image
1. In ‘HTML Tags’ view click the tag for the table (or
cell) while pressing the control key.
2. On the Status Bar right click on the highlighted
tag.
3. Select ‘Inline Styles’, ‘Background Properties’.
You can then select the tiling and/or position
properties as required.
Note Background images are visible in Normal
or Preview mode but not in HTML tags view.
3.6.2.4 Setting cell border and spacing
Right-click in a table, select ‘Table Cell Properties’
and the ‘Table Properties’ window appears. By select-
ing the 'Table' Tab the spacing is revealed as defaulting
to 2 pixels between cells. If this is set to zero the gaps
referred to in the previous paragraph disappear.
Note The ‘Table Properties’ window can also be
accessed from within a table by clicking the
‘Table’ button.
The ‘border’ defaults to 1 pixel. This border appears
around the edge of the table and rules appear around
each cell rendering the outlines easily visible. If the
border is set to zero both border and rules disappear.
If the border is set to a value greater than 1 pixel
the rules re-appear and the border appears in the
wider value specified. The exact appearance of the
table border depends on the browser used.
Other aspects of these lines e.g. colour or sup-
pressing rules when table border is selected cannot be
controlled using these methods.
Note For full control of borders use a Stylesheet
(see section 4.2.1 especially 4.2.1.3). (To set a
border for the table/ normal cells/ header cells
set the style for the table/ td/ th element as
appropriate.)
The ‘Table Properties’ window also allows the
‘padding’ to be set. Padding is the distance between
the cell content, e.g. text, and the edge of the cell. This
provides an alternative way of establishing space be-
tween the content of adjacent cells. Padding applies to
all four edges of a cell and to all the cells in a table.
Once again use a style for fuller control.
3.6.2.5 Colouring tables
This has already been referred to in section 3.6.2.2.
KompoZer however provides several routes to colour-
ing tables or cells. These include:
Right-click on table and select Table Cell Prop-
erties.
Use Table button to open Table Properties win-
dow.
Right-click in table and select ‘Table or Cell.
Background Color’.
3.6.2.6 Cell sizes
As you work on a table the sizes of the cells may
keep on changing. It is useful to understand how
browsers treat tables. Unless the size of a table or cell
is constrained in some way a browser will expand the
cell in an attempt to accommodate any text inserted.
Other cells in the same column will have the same
width. This will tend to reduce the space available for
any adjacent column of cells. Eventually the browser
will attempt to balance the allocation to each column
by wrapping the text. The overall effect will probably
minimise the total height of the table.
Tables can have their width completely unspecified,
specified to be a particular width in pixels or some
percentage of window width.
When a table is started, the Insert Table automati-
cally selects the ‘Quickly’ tab. This allows KompoZer to
make the decisions. If the ‘Precisely’ tab is selected the
user can make selections specifying the width in pixels
or as a percentage and specifying the border width.
Tables specified as percentage or unspecified are more
accommodating to differing window or screen sizes
and are recommended.
Browsers do not have to slavishly follow instruc-
tions. If a table specification is too narrow to accom-
modate the cell contents the table will grow beyond its
specified limit. This can occur if a large image is
inserted or a long word like
'Antidisestablishmentarianism'.
3.6.2.7 Table properties
The table properties window opens when you
Click a table and click the table button
Right click anywhere in a table and select ‘Table
cell properties’.
Tables and cells can be re-formatted in many ways.
This means that you don't have to plan everything in
advance before you start your table as settings can be
adjusted later.
The table properties window provides an option to
insert a caption which can be positioned on any edge.
For those familiar with them, the ‘Advanced Edit’
button gives direct access to inline styles.
3.6.3 Inserting Text
Inserting text into a ta-
ble cell is one of the sim-
plest of tasks. Inserted
text will be formatted as a
TD element but may be
re-formatted as a paragraph or using styles.
Even the simplest of can tasks become tedious if
carried out repetitively possibly copying and pasting
from pre-prepared text.
After selecting a piece of text KompoZer offers a
useful facility via Tables > Create table from selection.
Tip: Use HTML Tags view
to see where to input the
text.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 15
Lines of text (whether terminated by line breaks or
paragraph ends) will be converted to table rows, a new
cell being generated each time the specified character
is met. This allows tabbed lists to be created and
overcomes the fact that HTML does not support tabs –
simply type a hyphen (or some other character) in-
stead of the tab and convert the text to a table.
Using this method tables may be imported from
applications like MS Word. In Word convert the table
to text separating using a character that does not
appear in the text.
Note Do not use tab as the separator as Kom-
poZer will interpret this as several spaces. (See
section 3.4.5)
3.6.3.1 Aligning text
Browsers normally display text aligned left and, in
the vertical dimension, in then middle of the cell. To
alter this place the cursor in a cell and click the Table
button. The Table properties window allows the align-
ment to be altered. To set the alignment for all cells
first select Table > Select > All Cells.
3.6.4 Centring tables
To align a table to the centre of a page click the
table, right-click Table Cell Properties’, select ‘Table’
and set ‘Table Alignment’ to ‘Center’.
3.6.5 Improving tables
There are a number of ways in which tables may be
improved in presentation and accessibility. These in-
clude:
Caption This is text describing the nature of the
table. Insert this using the Table Properties window.
The caption may be positioned on any edge of the table.
Summary – Captions will often be inadequate as a
summary of the purpose and structure of the table
from the perspective of people relying on non-visual
user agents. W3C recommends
“Authors should therefore take care to provide
additional information summarizing the purpose
and structure of the table using the summary
attribute of the TABLE element. This is especially
important for tables without captions.
To add a summary, in the Table Properties window,
select the Table tab and click the Advanced edit but-
ton. On the HTML attributes tab select the Summary
attribute and insert the text in the ‘Value’ box.
Headings Headings to rows and/or columns
improve the visual presentation and make the mean-
ing of the content clearer. By default headings are
displayed bolder and centred. Headings are imple-
mented in HTML by replacing td (table data) elements
by th (table header) elements. To change a cell from td
(normal cell) to heading select the cell and, using the
Table Properties window, with the ‘cells’ tab selected
tick the ‘Cell Style’ checkbox and set the style to
‘Header’.
Accessibility Adding summaries and headings
represents the first step in improving accessibility of
tables to non-visual users. HTML offers more powerful
enhancements which improve the performance of text
to speech devices. For more details about this see
section 11.4 of the HTML 4.01 specification.
3.7 Links
Links provide the main means of navigating web
sites. They allow you to move quickly from one place
to either another on the same page, a different page on
the same site or a page on an external site. Links may
be attached to any element on a page, in fact almost
any part of a page content can form the basis of a link
an element being generated specifically for the pur-
pose. Usually however we use a few words of text or an
image which we click on to activate the link.
3.7.1 Linking text
3.7.1.1 Linking to another file
To create a link
1 Select (highlight) a few words of text
2 On the Composition toolbar click on the
‘Link’ button, alternatively Right-click and
select ‘Create Link’. The ‘Link Properties’ window
opens
3 Click on ‘Choose File’ and browse to the file that
you want to link to
4 Click OPEN
5 Click OK
In Normal or Preview mode you will now find your
text underlined and in a different colour (probably
blue) You can now try double-clicking on the text, you
will see the ‘Link Properties’ pop up again. This can be
very useful if you want to change the file to which the
link refers. (In a browser you would expect the file
viewed to be replaced by the one to which the link
refers!)
If you now switch to ‘HTML Tags’ view you will see
your text preceded by a yellow marker with an ‘A’ in it.
Your text has been defined as an ‘A’ (Anchor) element.
3.7.1.2 Inserting an email address
Instead of linking to a file it is possible to insert an
email address. The result will be that, in use, when the
link is clicked the email client on the visitor's machine
will be opened with the correct address selected.
To do so proceed as under the previous heading.
When the Link Properties window opens (or if Image
Properties click the Link tab) enter the email address
and check the box ‘The above is an email address’.
3.7.1.3 Inserting named Anchors
There is a second type of Anchor element the
‘Named anchor’. Such an anchor is extremely useful
as it can act as a type of bookmark defining a particu-
lar place on a page. Links can jump to such bookmarks.
To insert a named anchor
1 Place the cursor at the point you want to mark.
2 Click the ‘Anchor’ button on the Composition
toolbar or, on the Menu Bar, select Insert >
Named Anchor. The named anchor properties
window appears.
3 Enter a unique name for the anchor.
4 Click OK.
In ‘Normal’ view anchors are marked by a picture
of an anchor .
3.7.1.4 Linking to named anchors
Start as above for linking to another file. When the
‘Link Properties’ window opens, instead of choosing
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 16
file use the drop down list. Your anchor name should
appear there preceded by a “#”. Click it and OK. That’s
it! If you test your page on a browser when you click
the link the view should move to show the position of
the anchor.
Note If your page is short you may not notice
this. You need to test with a long page with the
link towards the bottom and the anchor to-
wards the top. With most browsers the anchor
should be sit on the top visible line.
3.7.1.5 Bigger jumps
You can jump directly to the position of named
anchors in other pages. KompoZer does not make this
quite so easy to achieve. Proceed as in ‘Linking to
another file’ above. Af-
ter you have chosen
the file and clicked
‘Open’ you will see the
name of the file in the
box, immediately after
this type “#” immedi-
ately followed by the
name of the anchor.
Thus, if your file was
called
‘pagetwo.html’ and
the anchor was called
‘p2anchor’ the com-
plete entry should read ‘pagetwo.html#p2anchor’
(without the quotes). Be very careful to get the case of
the text right. With some systems it doesn't matter but
with others your link will fail if the case is wrong. (I
recommend always using lower case for filenames and
anchors.)
Note The anchor name is ‘p2anchor’ NOT
‘#p2anchor’. The number symbol merely tells
a browser that the following text is an anchor.
You can also, and extremely usefully, jump to
pages or places on other web sites. All you have to do
is the enter the full URL (Web address) into the box.
Again be very careful about getting the case correct.
Make sure that the check box (‘URL is relative to page
location’ is cleared (you may have no option).
While you can link to named anchors on other sites
I suggest that you don't do this. Confine yourself to
linking to the home page (usually ending /index.html).
To link to other pages or anchors presupposes that the
webmaster will not re-arrange the structure of the site
– in the end your visitors may land up with links that
don't work.
3.7.1.6 Link colours
Links are normally underlined and in blue text. If
you look carefully you may see the colour change and
wonder why. Links can exist in several states the
principal are:
unvisited links the initial state
visited links have been visited in the past
hovered cursor now hovering over
While these probably appear in different colours it
is the browser which determines this.
Note For Transitional doctypes KompoZer offers
a means of altering the colours via Tools >
Options > New Page Settings. All new pages
should use the new selections (they don't affect
the currently open page). A better way to gain
full, reliable control is to clear ‘Use custom,
colors’ and set link colours using styles. See
section 4.2.5.2.
3.7.2 Linking images
The techniques and possibilities are very similar to
those used with text.
To create a link
1 Click on the image
2 On the Composition toolbar click on the
‘Link’ button, alternatively Right-click and
select ‘Create Link’. The ‘Image Properties’
window opens
3 Click on ‘Choose File’ and browse to the file that
you want to link to. (The box ‘URL is relative to
page location’ is checked. This means that if you
move your page to a new folder you should move
the image to a corresponding new folder. If you
clear this box the absolute address of the image
on the hard drive is given in full. If you move
your page now it will look there for the image. As
you start to organise a web site you will find that
this is not a good arrangement and potentially
disastrous when you upload the page to a server.)
4 Click OPEN
5 Click OK
3.7.3 Editing Links
To change the file to which a link refers, in Normal,
Tags or Preview mode double-click on the link. The
‘Link properties’ window opens (for an image the
‘Image Properties’ window opens - click the Link tab).
Edit the link.
To remove the link delete the link reference in the
box.
3.8 Frames
If you don’t know what frames are read no further
- you'll be no worse off.
KompoZer does not support frames – at least not at
present. If you open a frame document, you get a
message ‘This page can't be edited for an unknown
reason’ but it displays the frame content rather beau-
tifully. Then you can do nothing with it except click on
the ‘Source’ tab. You then see the source code and the
system will seem to lock up. Actually it doesn’t lock
and you can load another page and revert to normal
operation.
This is not a great limitation. Though the code for
frames takes a little getting used to it is usually quite
short and can easily be produced using a text editor.
Once established it probably rarely needs to be al-
tered. You can use KompoZer to develop the pages that
go into the frames.
Tip. If you have organised
your page well using headings
when appropriate KompoZer
makes linking to places on a
page extremely easy. Even if
you have not inserted an an-
chor choose the drop down list
as described. All headings will
be included in the list and
clicking on one will simultane-
ously create the anchor and
link to it.
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3.9 Forms
3.9.1 Introduction
Forms provide a mechanism by which a visitor to a
site may send data to as sever for processing. This may
be as simple as a box to write a message for e-mailing
or as complex as looking up items from a catalogue
and sending an order to a supplier. Forms collect data
typed in or collected from check boxes or lists and
pass them to the server. It follows that forms can be
used only in association with compatible software
running on the server.
Forms may be placed on standard web pages and
act as block level elements. In normal view KompoZer
shows forms surrounded by a dotted cyan box. Forms
may contain other standard block level elements
(paragraphs, headings …) as well as several specific
elements known as ‘form controls’ which are designed
for data collection. Since these form controls are es-
sentially inline elements they must be laid out inside
block level elements (typically paragraphs though divs
would be equally suitable).
Each item of data sent to the server is tagged with
information about which control has sent it. This is
done by naming each control. Thus designers must
give a unique name to each control to be used.
The data collected by a form will be sent to a URL
specified in an element ‘action’ which KompoZer will
add to the form. This URL is often on the server that
hosts the web page but does not have to be. The data
will be processed using one of two methods known as
‘GET’ or ‘POST’ which also need to be specified. These
details will be available from the provider of the asso-
ciated software.
3.9.2 To set up a form
1 Click the form button.
2 In the Form properties window give the
form a name of your choosing
3 Complete the Action box with the correct URL
and select the appropriate method
4 ‘Encoding’ and ‘Target Frame’ will frequently not
be required but, if they are, select ‘More Proper-
ties’ and complete the boxes
5 Click OK
6 On the form place any headings, paragraphs and
images ensuring that there is a placeholder for
any controls needed. (If blank placeholders are
needed it is probably sensible to put some dum-
my text in now and delete it later.)
7 Where controls are needed click the correspond-
ing placeholder and using the drop down box
beside the Form button select the required con-
trol
8 Give each control a unique name
9 Each control has specific information which
needs to be entered. Enter it into the box in the
window which appears
Note Since this is a guide to using KompoZer
and not to designing forms this is as far as we
go.
3.9.3 Form control styles
If the standard form styles do not appeal it is
possible by the use of styles to customise them to
personal preferences. For those familiar with using
styles some specific details are given in section 4.2.5.3.
3.10 Layers
3.10.1 What layers are
One of KompoZer's ‘Tip of the day’ says “Did you
know that ... you can move elements? Just place the
caret in the block you'd like to move and click once on
the Layer button to make the block movable.”
Items forming layers are taken out of the normal
document flow and placed in positions defined on the
page absolutely e.g. in positions fixed relative to the
page boundary.
While layers introduce a level of flexibility to page
design they also involve complexities that newcomers
may wish to avoid. This section is therefore for those
who wish to delve further.
3.10.2 Creating layers
To create a layer.
1 Click in the block that you want to format as a
layer.
2 Click the layer button on the Format (2)
toolbar.
The block becomes a ‘Layer’. Layers have
sizing boxes which allow the size to be altered. At the
top of the layer is a positioning handle (denoted by a
four-way arrow). To move the layer click and drag the
handle.
Layers do not have to consist
of a single block – any sequence
of elements that can be selected
together can be converted into a
layer. This may be several para-
graphs with or without head-
ings, images and tables.
Layers allow items to be
placed on a page so that the absolute position, relative
to the page, is defined. This provides a facility common
in drawing and desk top publishing programs and
allows items to be overlaid on top of each other. As
such it is a very powerful tool.
Text items normally have transparent background
so when overlaid become confused. By formatting
them with a background colour they become solid.
Similarly tables with solid background and non-trans-
parent images may be overlaid on each other to pro-
duce clear effects.
3.10.3 Characteristics of layers
Items converted to layers have several characteris-
tics which differ from ‘normal' items.
Layers in KompoZer are contained in ‘div’ ele-
ments. (For more on ‘div’ see section 4.5)
Layers break out of the normal flow in which
each block follows the previous and precedes the
next.
Layers, as created by KompoZer, have defined
width so do not accommodate to narrowing or
widening the viewing window.
Layers do not however have defined height so
will accommodate to changes in text size select-
ed in the browser.
Layers, as created, are characterised by three
parameters ‘top’, ’left’, and ‘width’. These define,
in pixels, how far the top left hand corner of the
layer is from the top left hand origin of the page
and how wide the layer is.
Location of posi-
tioning handle
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 18
Layers may be manipulated using the buttons
on the Format 2 toolbar.
3.10.4 Manipulating layers
To move a layer click the positioning handle and
drag it to the required position on the page.
To resize a layer drag a sizing handle as for other
elements.
When positioning a layer, KompoZer allows pixel-
accuracy movement. This can be difficult to achieve
and, if it is attempted to line up items, small errors
may become obvious. Better results may be achieved
by snapping positions to a coarser grid. To do so select
Format > Positioning grid and set the granularity
required. Movement will now be constrained to the
selection made.
Note This setting must be set each time a page
is opened. It is not remembered.
Note Snapping applies to dragging the position
not the size.
Warning If several overlapping layers occur on
a page it may become impossible to click on a
handle. In this event try resizing it so that the
handles become accessible, alternatively tempo-
rally move another layer out of the way.
Note If the height of a layer is dragged, though
previously undefined, it becomes defined but
the contents will overflow so there will be no
visible change.
When positioning layers so that they overlap a
mechanism is needed to define which is in front
(so entirely visible) which behind (so partially
obscured). Two buttons (‘Bring to front’ and
‘Send to back’) on the Format 2 toolbar take care
of this. Select the layer and click the appropriate
button.
Layers, as created, do not have a property ‘z-index’
allocated. When brought to the front a z-index with
value =1 is attached. The z-index defines how far
forward the layer is. If another layer is to be brought
to the front of the first it needs z-index to be set to 2.
Selecting it and bringing it to the front however merely
sets the index to 1. By
repeating the process the
index is set to 2 and the
layer brought further for-
ward.
Note The buttons would be more appropriately
labelled ‘Bring forward’, and ‘Send back’.
3.10.5 Gluing
Six other buttons on the Format 2 toolbar
can be used to modify the behaviour of layers.
They are
Glue to the left border
Glue to the right border
Stay in the center
Glue to the top
Glue to the bottom
Stay in the middle
Clicking the first (Glue to the left) initially has
no effect since this is the default condition. If
clicked after some conflicting condition was set
it fixes the distance of the left hand side of the
selected layer from the left edge.
Glue to the right fixes the distance of the right hand
side (rather than the left hand side) of the layer from
the right hand edge.
Glue to the center defines the position, not in
absolute terms but as a percentage of the available
width. Thus, if created at the centre of the space, it will
remain in the centre, similarly for any other ratio.
Glue to the top also represents the default condi-
tion otherwise it fixes the distance from the top of the
layer to the top edge.
Glue to the bottom and Stay in the center are best
avoided by other than advanced users who will proba-
bly be using style sheets to achieve the effect required.
3.10.6 Doing it in style
Dragging an item is a rather imprecise action.
KompoZer implements layers by using CSS absolute
positioning styles. More precise control can be ob-
tained by editing the style parameters.
To do so, in HTML tags view, right-click the ‘DIV’
tag for the layer and select ‘Advanced properties’,
‘Inline style’.
It is instructive to note which properties are applied
to achieve each effect.
Gluing option
Initial Left Center Right Top Middle Bottom
Property Values given to property
position absolute absolute absolute absolute absolute absolute absolute
width px px px px px px px
top px px px px px % auto
left px px % auto px px px
right auto auto px
bottom auto auto px
3.10.7 Using classes
Instead of setting up layers manually as described
so far, a class may be allocated to the ‘div’ that con-
tains the layer. The CSS editor allows classes with the
required properties to be established.
In the CSS editor all the required properties are
located under the 'Box' tab. The required properties
and values are
Property Value Unit
Position Position absolute
Width width px
Top Offsets - Top px or %
Left Offsets - Left px or %
Right Offsets - Right px or %
Bottom Offsets - Bottom px or %
Z-index Z-index Integer
By using a class further options become available
which cannot be achieved by using the toolbar but-
tons. The position selector provides options of Abso-
lute, Relative, Static or Fixed. The ‘fixed’ option is used
in the HTML version of this User Guide to position the
menu. The layer remains in a fixed position on the
screen, not scrolling. The effect is similar to that
attainable using frames for a web site.
Warning Internet Explorer version 6 does not
support fixed position.
3.11 Borders
Elsewhere a number of methods for applying bor-
ders to images and tables have been mentioned. The
level of control possible has varied from case to case
and the use of style sheets to gain full control has been
referred to.
Layers in front and behind
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There is one further method which is very easy to
apply and which is applicable not only to single ele-
ments (e.g. Table (and/or cells), Image, Heading, Para-
graph, Form) but also to a group opf elements.
The method uses the full border capabilities of CSS
which provides complete control of
Colour of the border
Thickness (width) of the border
Style – Solid, dotted, dashed, double etc.
Different choices for each side
The method does not cover other options which are
sometimes available elsewhere e.g. Padding.
To apply a border select a block or highlight a
group of blocks, then and click the ‘Borders’
button.
Note The Borders button is not installed by
default. To access it customise the Format Tool-
bar. See section 9.3
Leave the check box ticked and set the style, width
and colour for the top border. If all borders are to be
the same click ‘OK’ otherwise clear the box and edit
the settings for the other sides.
3.12 The Body
This is the background on which the whole page
sits. The Body may be thought of as the Page itself.
Normally it is of little concern to the designer but there
are a few situations when it is.
The body can carry a background colour or image
which lies behind everything else on the page in HTML
documents (in XHTML documents, the background
content for the body element defines only the back-
ground for the body element).Thus the overall appear-
ance of a page can be significantly determined by this
content.
To set a background
1 On the Status bar click the <body> marker. All
the contents of the page will be highlighted.
2 Right-click and select ‘Inline Styles’ and
‘Background properties’.
3 Make the desired selections and click OK.
The ‘Inline Styles’ allows you to set several other
properties for the whole page. This includes Text,
Border and Box properties. This can be a quick way of
styling a whole page since Text properties, for in-
stance, will trickle down (technically they are ‘inherit-
ed’) to everything on the page for which they are not
otherwise specifically stated. Border and box proper-
ties are not inherited.
Stylesheets (see section 4.4) often set several gen-
eral properties for the body to avoid having to repeat
them several times.
Inline styles may set the body width to be less than
the full window width. In this case it may be desired to
centre the page in the window.
To centre a page in the window
1 On the Status bar click the <body> marker. All
the contents of the page will be highlighted
2 Right-click and select ‘Inline Styles’ and ‘Box
properties’
3 In the ‘Width’ box select the width desired for
the page
4 In the ‘Margins’ area in both ‘Left’ and ‘Right’
boxes type ‘auto’
5 Click OK
3.13 Table of contents
3.13.1 Introduction
If you have a long document with sections headed
using heading formats Heading 1, Heading 2 etc Kom-
poZer can generate a Table of Contents (ToC) automat-
ically. The table reflects the structure of the page, the
content of the headings forming the text of the table.
By default the entries in the ToC will be linked to
the heading to which they refer thus facilitating navi-
gation around the page.
If required, the ToC can be numbered so that the
Heading 1 levels are numbered from 1 upwards, Head-
ing 2 levels are numbered from 1 upwards but this
numbering restarts each time the level 1 number is
incremented. Similarly for lower levels.
It is not necessary to list all heading levels in the
ToC; for example it is possible to select only first and
second levels. More importantly it is not necessary for
the page to include any particular heading level so, if
the page formatting uses Heading 5 and Heading 6
only, these may form the basis of the ToC; thus the use
of Table of Contents imposes little restraint on the
document structure.
If the headings in the page do not provide a satis-
factory structure for the ToC it is possible to include
short paragraphs specifically for this purpose. These
may be included at any level in the ToC. The selected
paragraphs are identified by applying a named class
style (section 4.2.3) generated for the purpose (unless
fortuitously pre-existing). Alternatively a <div> (section
4.5) to which a named class style has been applied
may be used.
Generating and using a ToC in this way has the
considerable advantage that it can be automatically
maintained ensuring that changes to the page are
accurately reflected.
A ToC works only within the page in which it
resides. Links to other pages must be entered and
maintained manually.
3.13.2 Inserting a Table of Contents
To insert a ToC
1 Place the cursor where the table is required
2 Click Insert > Table of Contents > Insert
3 The ‘Table of Contents’ window appears
4 In the column headed ‘Tag’ select the tag for
each level e.g. against level 1 select h3 and
against level 2 select h4 and for all the others
select ‘--’
5 If, instead of using headings you wish to use
classed paragraphs or a div, instead of selecting
a heading tag select ‘p’ or ‘div’ and in the box in
the column headed ‘Class’ enter the class re-
quired. (It is, of course, also possible to select
headings by allocating a class.)
6 If you wish the contents to be numbered check
the box ‘Number all entries ...’
7 Click OK
The Table of Contents will be created.
Note The box ‘Make the table of contents read-
only’ does not work.
To update a ToC after changes have been made to a page.
There is no need to place the cursor.
1 Click Insert > Table of Contents > Update
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2 The ‘Table of Contents’ window appears showing
the selections previously made
3 If desired, changes may be made to the selections
4 To update the ToC click OK
To delete a ToC.
There is no need to place the cursor.
1. Click Insert > Table of Contents > Remove
3.13.3 Methods
KompoZer builds the ToC using Ordered or Unor-
dered lists. (section 3.4.4). These lists have to be
nested to produce the structure required. The result is
that each level of the contents is indented relative to
the previous. The indentation may be altered using
styles and specifying the OL or UL and LI elements.
The changes required will be to the margin and pad-
ding (section 4.2.1.4). Any changes made will apply to
all lists on the page (not only ToC).
In order to make links work, each tag listed in the
table will have a named anchor added automatically
when the table is created or updated. Deleting a ToC
also deletes all these anchors.
3.14 The Head area
Every HTML document starts with a ‘Head’ area.
This provides information to browsers, search engines
etc but is invisible on the page.
Items included on the head are gathered from a
number of sources. These may include:
Items dependent on the Doctype as set when
creating the page (section 3.2.1).
Items collected from New Page Settings (section
9.1). Includes Author, Language.
Items set by the Format > Page Title and proper-
ties menu. Includes Title, Author, Description,
Language, Writing direction Character set.
Links to stylesheets (section 4.1.3.3)
Definitions for internal styles (section 4.1.3.2)
Source view allows advanced users to add further
information as desired.
3.15 Page views
KompoZer provides four ways of viewing a page -
‘Normal’, ‘HTML Tags’, Source’, ‘Preview’. These are
selected using the tabs on the Edit mode Toolbar.
All provide full editing facilities.
Preview mode offers almost the same view as in
a browser with the addition of rulers and sizing
boxes. The main differences are that scripts do
not run (so their effects will not be seen), links
do not operate and the style for links does not
respond to any class set. Tooltips do work how-
ever.
Normal view is very similar but here table out-
lines show and markers for named anchors ap-
pear.
HTML Tags view assists those familiar with
HTML. There is a yellow marker for the start tag
for all elements (end tags are omitted). Clicking
on a marker selects and highlights the whole of
the element.
Note If clicking an element does not select it
press the control key while clicking.
You will also see the element highlighted on the
Status Bar (see figure). If you switch to Source view the
element remains highlighted,
Note It will be on the screen but possibly right
at the bottom.
This is of great assistance in editing. Marker names
correspond with the HTML tag name with a few excep-
tions.
Note Named anchors are shown with a symbol
whereas linked anchors are denoted by ‘A’, The
marker ‘Span’ is used when certain changes are
made inline with text – for instance if the colour
is changed for a single word. Span in HTML has
a more restricted use being confined to changes
implemented using styles. This may be confusing.
In HTML Tags view background images do not
appear.
Source view shows all detail of the HTML code.
All except the DOCTYPE may be edited.
An additional view is provided via the
‘Browse’ button. This opens your default brows-
er and gives full browser functionality and display to
a page.
Warning If your default browser is Internet
Explorer the page may open in source view
instead of page view.
3.16 Editing in Source view
This mode is intended for those confident in coding
in HTML. In this mode KompoZer is not simply a text
editor. On switching to a different mode KompoZer
carries out checks to ensure that the code is valid. If
not it ‘fixes’ it. It will have made its best guess at what
was intended – if it gets it wrong there is no going back
no ‘Undo’ button. While this may sometimes save
you a lot of typing, if you know what you are doing, it
is also possible to end up with a heavily ‘messed up’
page it will display but half the content could have
disappeared.
Needless to say good backup practice can save
many disasters. The Site Manager (section 8) is actu-
ally a convenient tool for doing this. Create a backup
folder and ‘Publish’ to this !
If you select an element via the status bar (see next
section) to highlight it, on switching to source view the
corresponding code will also be highlighted. This
makes it possible to locate code very easily. (For an
image the cursor will be adjacent to the code.)
The line numbers which appear are an editing
convenience, they form no part of the code. They can
help to find your place when switching modes. When
switching between applications the numbers are only
an approximate guide.
Showing use of edit mode toolbar to select page
views and Status bar highlighting selected element
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 21
KompoZer provides some options in how lines are
displayed as mentioned in section 9.2 on ‘Preferences’
or see KompoZer Help.
3.17 Selecting items – Reprise
By now KompoZer users should be familiar with
selecting and manipulating items. A recapitulation
may be useful however.
These comments apply in Normal, HTML Tags or
preview mode.
KompoZer often offers a number of ways of doing
something. Sometimes one method will apply some-
times another. Which works will depend on a) what is
to be selected and b) what is to be done with the
selection.
Selecting text.
Simply place the cursor anywhere in a block.
This is often sufficient where a format is to be
applied to a complete block.
Double-click within a block to select a word.
Triple click within a block to select a line of text.
Drag across a section of text to highlight and
select that section only.
Many functions may be carried out on the selected
text this includes
Dragging to a different position,
Applying a class
Changing the element tag e.g. changing from a
paragraph to a list.
Selecting in HTML tags view
Sometimes selections in normal or preview mode
become difficult or impossible.
In HTML Tags view press the Control key while
clicking on the tag for the block to select a
complete block.
Actions appropriate to complete blocks such as
dragging or applying a class are possible.
Selecting via the Status bar
This is a quite excellent tool. Click in any text
object or image, then, on the Status bar, click on the
element marker farthest to the right. The object is
selected. To the left of this are shown any elements
higher in the document tree. Click any of these to
select the corresponding elements. KompoZer also
displays the class or id of each element allowing for
easier selection.
Double clicking
This provides a powerful context-sensitive function
which often provides the fastest route to appropriate
actions.
Double click an image to reach the ‘Image prop-
erties’ window which allows changes to image
location, name, size, link etc.
Double click a link or anchor to edit the name,
properties etc.
Double click a table or cell to access properties
such as size, colour, alignment.
Double click most things to obtain access to
‘Advanced properties’ via the ‘Advanced edit’
button which appears on the first window to
open. While these require more detailed knowl-
edge of HTML or CSS they can be used to apply
extensive formatting options to items.
Tip: Escaping to page body.
Occasionally you may wish to escape from some ele-
ment to the body of the page. For instance if you have
two tables immediately following each other, pressing
the down arrow at the end of one will take you into the
next, you can't insert anything between them. If you
have a paragraph with a special style the enter key will
start a new paragraph with the same style, if you don't
want that you have to clear the style. If you have a
division which is the last item on a page you can't add
anything after it.
In any of these situations click the last, or only, item in
the element and, on the status bar, click the marker for
the element, next press the down arrow key. This will
take the pointer to below the div though the cursor will
not be visible.
Then just type.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 22
4 Style and stylesheets
4.1 Introduction to style
The use of styles is already well established in word
processing and desk top publishing. In web site design
it assumes an even more important role and can
control almost every aspect of presentation.
Styles in HTML documents should comply with
the requirements of the W3C style specifications.
These are detailed in Cascading Style Sheets, level
2 Revision 1 CSS2.1 Specification’ which is available
at http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/.
A full introduction and many useful referenc-
es
may be found at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cascading_Style_Sheets
4.1.1 Power of styles
Styles specify how particular elements on a page
appear on the screen, in print or whatever. This guide
limits itself to on-screen considerations. By ‘elements’
we mean parts of the page structure, typically head-
ings and paragraphs, but also stretching to many
others including tables, bulleted and numbered lists
etc. In fact most HTML ‘Tags’ may be specified though
the same style may be applied to several.
Style may typically define such aspects of presenta-
tion as the font face, size and variant, the font colour,
the background colour, whether an element is to be
aligned right, centre or left, whether spaced away from
other elements, surrounded by a border and, if so,
what type or colour. Elements may be given an abso-
lute position relative to the page (which allows ele-
ments to overlap). Elements such as paragraphs,
tables and images are considered to exist within boxes
or blocks and the sizes of these boxes may be specified.
Note You can see the outlines of the blocks by
selecting ‘View – Block outline’.
4.1.2 Classes
As well as allowing you to specify the style of
elements it is possible to define styles and apply them
selectively to only some elements. This is done
through ‘Classes’ – a ‘Class’ is just a style that can be
applied as and when you choose.
‘Classes’ are applied to Tags’ (a marker attached to
an element). The element to which the class is applied
appears in the format defined by the class. Other
similar elements without the class applied appear in
the default format i.e. either the default specified by
the browser or the style that the user has defined for
the corresponding element.
On the status bar KompoZer shows classes along
with the tag to which they are applied.
4.1.3 Using style
4.1.3.1 Inline style
Within a page styles may be used in three ways.
These ways can be mixed and matched as you wish.
The first, easiest and crudest is to define a style for the
nonce, there and then. Such a style is listed in the
code (in Source view) with the tag to which it applies
(using the structure ‘style = …’ if you look at the code).
Don't worry KompoZer hides all this from you.
If you have another item with the same style this
code must be repeated. This bloats the page. This is
known as an ‘inline style’. For the most part KompoZer
users do not have to be concerned with this method
although KompoZer will sometimes use it without you
knowing.
4.1.3.2 Internal style
The second way to use a style is to embed a list of
style definitions within the HEAD section of a page.
(These definitions are referred to as ‘style rules’ or just
‘rules’)
These rules may be of one of two sorts. The first
sort applies to all elements of a particular type (e.g. p,
h1, table) the second is the class as discussed above.
Note If you look at the HTML source code you
will see a structure like <p class=
"mynicepara"> when the class ‘mynicepara’
has been applied. The corresponding code
where no class is applied is <p>. If you look at
the structure of the style sheet for a class you
will see the class name preceded by a dot (full
stop) e.g. ".mynicepara" while a generally ap-
plied style will look like ‘p’. Generally applied
styles must, of course, carry the name of the
element to which they apply whereas a class can
have any name you like to give it. To help
maintain the site it is good to give it a name that
describes its function NOT the resulting appear-
ance.
4.1.3.3 External style – Linked sheets
While the first two methods are valid and have their
uses, the third is the preferred method specifically
because it is economical, reuses the same styles for
many pages and helps in achieving consistency of
appearance right across a complete web site. The
method uses an external style sheet which is ‘Linked’
to a page, or to several pages (though each page must
include the linking information for itself).
An external style sheet contains the same list of
rules which would otherwise have been included in the
internal list referred to above. (It is actually a simple
text document such as you could construct using a
text editor like Windows® Notepad.) The file is usually
located in the same folder (directory) as the page to
which it is linked (though it can be elsewhere) and has
the extension ‘css’.
How does a page know to use this style sheet? A
line of code which, KompoZer will insert for you in the
head section of your page, will see to this.
The code looks like <link rel="stylesheet"
type="text/css" href="mystylesheet.css>
4.1.3.4 Cascading stylesheets
You may wonder if you have an external style
sheet, perhaps internal rules and inline styles will
there be confusion? This is where the cascading comes
in. Your browser should first use whatever its default
style would be. If it finds a matching style in an
external sheet it should use that instead, it should
then look at internal styles and, if any coincide with
anything it is planning to use that should override
them. Lastly inline styles prevail.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 23
How could that be used? Well perhaps your site
establishes a style using an external style sheet. Per-
haps you have one page about emergency procedures
and you decide that all its paragraphs should be in
red. You simply add an internal rule on that page
redefining the ‘p’ tag to be red but also link the page to
your normal style sheet. All your normal styles will be
applied except that all paragraph text will be in red,
nothing else will be non-standard.
KompoZer will actually allow you to link several
external sheets to a page. The browser reads these in
the order encountered and acts on the most recent
information read. Internal sheets still obtain priority
irrespective of the order they appear in the code.
The full rules for prioritisation are rather complex.
Perhaps in an attempt to assist here KompoZer allows
you to switch off style sheets while testing pages. With
the CaScadeS open (see later) select a stylesheet and
check the ‘Disabled’ box.
Styles employ a bespoke nomenclature. KompoZer
uses this little since, except in source view, the code is
hidden from the author. The terms involved do appear
in this User Guide. Here they are along with some
examples. The examples show the source code that
would appear either in the head area of your page or
in an external style sheet.
Style Nomenclature
Simple rule with one declaration p { font-family : Arial, sans-serif ;}
Rule with 2 declarations p { font-family : Arial, sans-serif ; font-size : medium ;}
Rule with 2 selectors h1 , h2 { Color : #990000 ;}
Rule with class selector .redtext { color : red ;}
Rule with complex selector * #menu li a:link { text-decoration : none ;}
Key:
Rules appear within a blue bordered box
Selectors have a red border and white background
Declarations have a dashed border
Properties have a green border and white background
Values have a magenta border and white background
* This selector selects list items in the div with id ‘menu’ and which are linked.
Creating a style rule for an element
4.2 Creating styles
4.2.1 Internal styles
As we will see later style rules are stored in style-
sheets. KompoZer includes a CSS editor called CaS-
cadeS which allows you to create stylesheets and
define rules. Before you define a rule you must have a
stylesheet but if you are working on a page which has
none CaScadeS will create one for you.
Creating a style rule for an element
To create a style rule for an element
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the Com-
position toolbar. The CSS Stylesheets
window opens.
2 Click on the artist's palette button. In the ‘Sheets
and rules’ pane you will see an internal style-
sheet has been created for you.
3 To create a rule click ‘Style applied to all ele-
ments of type’
4 Beside the blank box click the drop down arrow.
You will see listed a number of common ele-
ments. To create a style for one of these click it
alternatively enter the tag for any other element.
5 Click ‘Create Style rule’
6 You are now presented with a window headed
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 24
‘Selector’ followed by the tag for the element. The
window actually lists the style declarations for
that element, but of course that is now blank.
To define how you want elements to look:
1 Select in turn as required the tabs for ‘Text’,
‘Background’, ‘Border’ etc and specify exactly
how you wish that element to appear. The next
section amplifies some details of how to do this.
2 Return to the general tab to see the full declara-
tions that you have set for the Selector.
3 If you click the ‘General’ tab you will see all the
declarations for the rule. You can edit these here
but it is better to leave the job to CaScadeS
because if you make any errors the declaration
will be deleted
4 When you are satisfied click ‘OK’
Once created, rules may be edited by reopening
CaScadeS, Click and expand the stylesheet and click
the rule involved.
In the ‘Sheets and rules’ pane on the left you
should see a structure showing each tag as it is defined.
I won't go through all the options, just mention a
few.
First, do note you are not obliged to specify any
particular properties. You specify as much or as little
as you wish. It's just that the browser will revert to
defaults if you don’t. There are fairly complicated rules
for what it uses, and browsers don’t always follow the
rules, however chances are that you’ll be happy with
whatever it does – if you're not – change it!
You may like to try setting declarations for the
‘body’ and apply it to all elements. In most cases
declarations specified here with trickle down to every-
thing else (they are ‘inherited’) unless you specify it
explicitly elsewhere. Generally this works but can
generate surprises.
Note The tabs available in CaScadeS allow a
large number and all the most important style
properties to be set. The CSS specification how-
ever includes many others. If you are familiar
with these you can type declarations manually
into the box (incorrectly) headed ‘Style rule’. On
closing CaScadeS the validity of the declaration
will be checked and those which are valid will be
added to the stylesheet.
4.2.1.1 Text Tab
Font family. You are offered three ways of specify-
ing
Unspecified
Pre-defined
Use custom font family
In common parlance ‘font families’ are referred to
as ‘fonts’. CSS always refers to them as ‘font families’.
The correct typographic term is ‘Typeface’. (The Eng-
lish word for ‘font’ is ‘fount’ but sadly the American
word has come into general use in the UK.)
‘Unspecified’ leaves everything to the browser
‘Predefined’ has a drop down selector offering one
of three choices. Each choice has a set of 3 fonts which
have fundamentally similar characteristics. The choic-
es are:
Sans serif proportional fonts.
Serif proportional fonts.
Fixed spacing fonts.
Each set has three entries. The first two are alter-
native similar fonts; the third entry is a statement of
the generic font type – the browser should look for the
first font listed, if it can't find it, look for the second
and, if that can't be found, use a font of the generic
type of the final entry. Thus something suitable will
always be found.
‘Custom font family’ is an option to be avoided or
used with extreme caution. The list offered is taken
from the fonts installed on the author's computer. If
you choose one which is not available on your
visitor's computer there is no control over what
will be used.
On the other hand, if carefully used, this option is
very flexible and you can build your own set using the
model from the ‘Predefined’ selector.
To build a set of fonts.
1 Note the structure of the ‘Predefined’ sets. The
lists are built with each font name terminated by
a comma and each set finished with a generic
type.
2 Select a generic type from the following: serif,
sans-serif, cursive, fantasy, monospace.
3 Select preferred fonts corresponding to the ge-
neric type required.
4 With the Text tab selected check ‘Use custom
font family’ and in the box type the name of your
preferred fonts each followed by a comma, finish
with a generic type.
Note 1 You will probably wish to include one
font available on Windows PC systems and an
equivalent available on Macintosh computers.
Note 2 You may enter as many fonts as you wish.
Note 3 Using ‘cursive’ or ‘fantasy’ options is not
recommended since the level of standardisation
between visitors will render the results very
uncertain.
Note 4 If you use a font which has a name
which includes spaces (such as Times New
Roman) the name must be enclosed within
quotes e.g. “Times New Roman”. If you fail to do
this the result will probably still work but vali-
dation will fail.
Font size. There are three sections offering differ-
ent types of option. The first block is a miscellany
offering various units. Because display screens vary in
size and resolution and because people's eyes and
preferences differ, browsers offer view options allowing
the user to alter the text size. If this facility is disabled
the user may not be able to see the page as he or she
would wish. Some of the options in this first group (e.g.
px, pt, cm, in, mm, pc) either apply to print media or
are for fixed size units. These may disable browser
zooming or result in unpredictable sizes. You will
probably find the last set of named styles (starting
xx-small) is most satisfactory, alternatively use the
percentage or em scales. As you select and alter the
size you can see the result directly on your page.
Absolute and relative sizes.
When setting font sizes for text lying directly in the
body element 1em, 100% and 'medium' generally yield
identical results. Font sizes are inherited so text in
elements which themselves sit in the body will, unless
specified separately, use the same sizes. Elements
may however sit, not directly in the body but, within
other elements such as a table or a division. Where
such a table or division has a font size set on itself this
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 25
may be inherited by text within that table or division.
For instance, if a div has font size set to 150% and a
paragraph within the div has font size set to 1em then
the text will actually be rendered at 1.5em due to it
inheriting the scale from the div.
Note A division is formed using the <div> ele-
ment. See section 4.5
An example of how this can work is given in the
next figure. Text sits in table cells, which sit within a
table which sits within a division. One of the tables
and one of the cells has font size specified. Others do
not.
Not all sizes scale in this way. Sizes set as a
percentage or in em or ex do scale and are referred to
as relative sizes. Sizes specified using the xx-small
system do not scale and are referred to as absolute
sizes
Note All sizes will zoom using the browser text
size options with the exception of sizes specified
in pixels. In this case browsers vary in response.
Font Colour. Either enter a colour into the box or
click on the button to the right. If you click on the
button the ‘Text Color’ window opens and you have
three more options. (It's like buying an ice cream in the
USA or making a phone call in the UK.) You can
specify in terms of Hue, Saturation and Brightness
(HSB), Red, Green Blue values (RGB) (range 0 to 255).
Alternatively click on one of the 70 boxes of colours
offered.
These are so-called ‘web safe’ colours because
they work on lower performance displays. Actu-
ally the full range of 216 web-safe colours is not
provided but, in any case, modern displays
normally work in at least 24-bit colour so there
is little justification for this limitation.
The next option is to click on the rainbow type area.
Whichever you choose, the selected colour appears
immediately on the square. Fine adjustments may be
made using the RGB or HSB values. A box labelled
Hex value shows the colour as a hexadecimal number.
Actually you could have done this directly without
opening the ‘Text Color’ window - when you close the
window you'll see the hex value (preceded by a '#') in
the box along with a sample of the colour on the button.
Named colours. You might have noticed, as you
clicked on one of the 70 colours, that occasionally in
the box labelled ‘Name’ the name of a colour appeared.
(Try black or red to check.) The CSS recommendation
recognises 17 colours and the names of these can be
entered directly here, or, in fact, into the selector box
without entering the ‘Text Color’ window.
Other text options
These appear below the colour option and are fairly
self-explanatory.
4.2.1.2 Background Tab
Colour
This is selected in the same way as for Font colour.
Image
You can specify an image file as a background. This
will appear behind anything else. Under ‘Tile’, if you
select ‘Don’t tile’ you get a single copy of the file which
you can position with the buttons below. If you select
‘Tile’ the image repeats in the directions selected.
Warning. The opacity option uses a property
not included in the CSS2 Specification, which is
either not implemented or implemented incor-
rectly by most browsers.
4.2.1.3 Border
Items can be bordered and the options available
provide great flexibility. Styles, thickness and colours
may be set independently for each side
Note For a border to show both width and style
must be specified.
4.2.1.4 Box
The block structure in which most elements are
located has already been mentioned (section 3.4.1).
The Box options control the display within these
blocks.
For those boxes which require a dimension to be
entered: first type the number, then select the unit
from the drop down box.
Margin Controls the distance between the ele-
ment's box, i.e. where any border would be, and either
the surrounding box or adjacent boxes.
Note Vertical margins 'collapse'. If a heading
has a bottom margin set to 20px and is followed
by a paragraph with a top margin set to 10px
the separation between them is controlled by
the greater (20px) not the sum (30 px).
Padding Controls the distance between the box
content and its border.
Width and Height allow a specific size to be allo-
cated to the content area of a box. This can be an
absolute width or a percentage of the containing box
The seventeen CSS colour names
Black Gray Maroon Red Orange Yellow
Lime Green Teal Olive Aqua Blue
Navy Fuchsia Purple Silver White
Text in Division.
Size not specified - Inherited.
Text in table. Size not specified.
Inherited from div.
Size for this cell set to 120%
Text in a second table
Text size for table set to 120%
Size for cell not specified
inherited from table.
Example of rule inheritance
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 26
Note The spin buttons beside each box allow
fine adjustments to be made easily. In most
cases the effect can be sen in real time on the
screen.
Float allows blocks to be treated rather like images
and to float them to the right or left hand side of a page
(or to the edge of the enclosing block). Other elements
may therefore appear to wrap around them.
Position, Offset and z-index are parameters relat-
ed to the use of layers. These have been covered in
section 3.10.6
4.2.2 Styling multiple elements
Instead of setting styles for one element at a time it
may be easier to specify several at the same time.
Perhaps all your headings are in one font (e.g. serif)
and all others in an other (sans-serif). You can specify
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 and h6 as serif font in a single
action. When you create a style rule at step, 4 instead
of entering the tag for one element, just list all required
and separate the tags by commas. Later you can
specify, for example the size of, each heading individ-
ually in a separate rule.
Editing selectors
If you have already set up the style declarations
required, perhaps for h1, but now want it to apply to
additional elements just click the ‘Edit selector’ button
above the ‘Sheets and rules’ pane and type in the
additional tags separated by commas.
4.2.3 Named Classes
I've suggested above that you start by applying
styles to all elements of a specific type. Such style
definitions will apply automatically wherever that ele-
ment is found on a page. This provides for great
consistency within a document but maybe a touch of
dullness! You can also define your own styles and
apply them selectively. These styles are known as
‘Classes’.
To create a class
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the
Composition toolbar. The CSS Style-
sheets window opens
2 If the stylesheet in which you wish to create the
class exists click it followed by the
artist's palette button . Else:
3 Click on the artist's palette button.
In the sheets and rules box you will see an
internal stylesheet has been created for you
4 To create a class click ‘Style applied to all ele-
ments of class’
5 In the box you will see a full stop entered for you.
Now either
Follow that by a
name of your
choice which
must start with
a letter or
Click the drop
down arrow be-
side the box to
get a list of al-
ready defined
classes and
click one of these
6 Click ‘Create Style rule’
7 You are now presented with a window headed
‘Selector’ followed by your class name. The win-
dow actually lists the style declarations for that
rule, but of course that is now blank
Now proceed as in section 4.2.1 ‘To define how you
want elements to look’. In that case you could watch
the effect of your styles appear immediately on your
page (assuming that you had a page which used the
corresponding elements). Now, of course, you have
none, so first we must learn how to apply a class to an
element.
First enter some details for your new class that will
allow you to recognise it on the screen if it is applied.
For instance use the border tab to produce a border
styled as solid, 2px wide, coloured red.
It is possible to set styles for several classes at the
same time just as it was for elements. Proceed as in
4.2.2 but precede all class names by a dot e.g. .style1,
.style2 (KompoZer automatically adds the dot for the
first).
4.2.3.1 Applying Classes
KompoZer provides two methods for applying class-
es. Method 1 is the simpler; sometimes it is difficult to
select the item to use this method in which case
method 2 is preferable.
Apply a class – Method 1
1 If necessary close CaScadeS
2 Select the item to which the class is to be ap-
plied. For a heading or paragraph simply click in
Tip:Class names can
contain letters, numbers,
hyphens and under-
scores but not spaces
and must not start with a
number. They are case
insensitive. N.B. Class
names do not include
the initial dot.
Creating a class
Showing content, padding, borders and margin
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 27
the text, to apply a class to an inline section of
text (span) highlight the text.
3 Use the class selector box on the Format toolbar
(see figure), click the drop down arrow and select
the class required.
4 The result of applying the class should be seen
in any view mode.
Note Although KompoZer is not a browser it
replicates the browser display very well. Howev-
er styles applied to links are not rendered cor-
rectly.
Apply a class – Method 2
Note This mode cannot be used to create the
span element needed to style an inline section
of text but can style such a section once the
span exists.
1 If necessary close the CaScadeS.
2 EITHER in ‘HTML Tags’ view Click on the yellow
marker for the element for which you want to set
a class. (If the element does not become selected,
as indicated by outlining or highlighting on the
screen, press the control key while selecting.)
OR in Normal or Preview mode click in a block
you wish to style then click on the Status bar on
the right-most element listed.
3 Now both the block involved and the correspond-
ing element and on the status bar should be
highlighted. (See figure above.)
4 Right-click the highlighted element on the status
bar and select ‘Classes’. You should see a list of
all classes pop up (This includes classes on
internal and linked stylesheets.) Any class al-
ready applied to the element appears, marked
with a tick ( ), at the top of the list above the
divider line; other available classes are below the
line.
5 To add a new class, click the class; To remove a
class, click the class above the divider.
Once a class has been attributed to an element it
is shown on the the tag on the status bar.
Note Elements can actually have several class-
es applied. If you do this you should ensure that
the class properties don't conflict with each
other. Most people will probably prefer to apply
only one class at a time. You may need to check
that you don't apply more by mistake.
4.2.3.2 Removing classes
A similar procedure may be used to disconnect an
element from a class. Using the highlighted tag meth-
od simply select the ticked class, this deselects it.
Using the class selector box select the style again, this
should cancel it. Alternatively, after selecting the ele-
ment, right-click on the highlighted tag on the status
bar and select ‘Advanced properties’. The selected
class will be listed select it and click ‘Remove’.
4.2.4 External styles
There are three ways to start working with external
style sheets
External style sheets are created in almost exactly
the same way as internal sheets.
4.2.4.1 Create a new external style sheet
To create an external style sheet if the file has no
internal or external stylesheet.
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the
Composition toolbar. The CSS Style-
sheets window opens showing that an
internal stylesheet has been created
for you
2 Click on the name of the stylesheet ‘Internal
stylesheet’
3 Click the dropdown arrow beside the
artist's palette button and select
‘Linked stylesheet’
4 Click ‘Create stylesheet’
5 Click the name of the stylesheet again
6 Click ‘Export stylesheet and switch to exported
version’
7 Give it a name with extension css and save it,
preferably in the same folder as your page
8 Click ‘Save’
Once the sheet has been created you may use it to
store any style rules that you wish.
When we created internal styles they were entered
on our page in the HEAD section. Now the styles are
being created in an external file. If you looked, in
‘Source’ View, in the head area you would see a line
referring to the external file and linking it to your page.
4.2.4.2 Change an internal style listing into an
external stylesheet
If you already have set up your page using internal
styles you can convert them into an external stylesheet
and link to that.
Do this
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the Composition
toolbar. The CSS Stylesheets window opens
showing the existing internal stylesheet
2 Click on the name of the stylesheet ‘Internal
stylesheet’
3 Click ‘Export stylesheet and switch to exported
version’
4 Give it a name with extension css and save it,
preferably in the same folder as your page
5 Click ‘Save’
4.2.4.3 Link to an existing stylesheet
If you have a stylesheet that you created for anoth-
er page or intend to use right across your site you can
link your page to that.
To link to an existing external style sheet
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the Composition
toolbar. The CSS Stylesheets window opens
2 Click the dropdown arrow beside the artist’s
palette button and select ‘Linked stylesheet’
Applying styles
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 28
3 Click ‘Choose file’ and browse to the file that you
need.
4 Click ‘Open’
5 Click ‘Create stylesheet’
6 Click ‘OK’
You can now close CaScadeS, but, of course you
can work on the stylesheet in the usual way.
4.2.4.4 Saving stylesheets
Once you edit a stylesheet in KompoZer its name is
marked by a red symbol indicating that it has not been
saved. When you close CaScadeS changed sheets are
saved immediately.
Warning If the sheet is linked to several pages,
any others which are open at the time will not
recognise the change until they have been
closed and re-opened. (File > Revert)
4.2.5 Other style selectors
4.2.5.1 Introduction
Element styles (section 4.2.1) and named classes
(section 4.2.3) are the two main ‘selectors’ used for
styles. A selector may be thought of as the link which
attaches a particular style declaration to a particular
item on a page.
Note Strictly the class selector consists of the
class name and a prefixed dot.
In addition to these the CSS specification provides
a large range of more complex selectors most of which
lie outside the scope of this Guide. For details see the
CSS Specification section 5. (See appendix 2.) There
are however a few cases which are needed more fre-
quently and for less complex sites and these are
covered in the next two sections.
4.2.5.2 Link styles
Browsers render links in default colours and pro-
vides some options for controlling these (see 3.7.1.6).
Through the use of styles full control of each state of a
link is possible. This is achieved through the use of
selectors called link ‘pseudo-classes’.
The more important pseudo-classes are
Selector Descripton
a:link for all links not yet visited
a:visited for links that have been visited
a:hover for a link over which the cursor is hovering
Note The following procedures are based on the
use of internal style sheets. Very similar proce-
dures may be used with external stylesheets.
To create link pseudo-classes
1 Proceed as if creating a class (see section 4.2.3)
2 At step 4 select ‘Custom style rule’ and, in the
box enter the selector as listed above.
3 At step 5 the selector name should appear as
entered.
It is now possible to style these options fully, i.e.
not only with text colour and decoration but with
background, boxes, the lot.
Note that the a:hover must be placed after the
a:link and a:visited rules, since otherwise
the cascading rules will hide the a:hover rule.
The CSS editor enters styles in the order encoun-
tered. The order may be altered by selecting an item
and clicking the ‘Up’ or ‘Down’ button.
Note These styles will now be applied to links
automatically. They do not have to be applied
manually as do classes.
4.2.5.3 Form control styles
Setting up forms to appear as required may require
styles to be set for specific controls. These are set
exactly as just described for links it is merely neces-
sary to set styles for the required selectors. Some of
the main ones are listed following.
Control Element Selector
Submit button Input input[type=submit]
Reset button Input input[type=reset]
Text input Input input[type=text]
Text area textarea textarea
Label label label
Field set fieldset fieldset
Legend legend legend
4.2.5.4 ID styles
Ids (or Unique identifiers) haven’t been mentioned
so far.
Since an id is a unique identifier it can be used
once only (on any page). Most commonly ids are used
in conjunction with the div element to mark a particu-
lar area on a page such as a table of contents, a menu
or some such. It is helpful in such cases to give the id
a name which indicates its use.
To create a style based on an id
1 Click the CaScadeS button on the Composition
toolbar. The CSS Stylesheets window opens
2 If the stylesheet in which you wish to create the
class exists click it followed by the artist's palette
button . Else:
3 Click on the artist’s palette button. In
the sheets and rules box you will see
an internal stylesheet has been creat-
ed for you
4 Click the CaScadeS button on the Composition
toolbar. The CSS Stylesheets window opens.
5 To create a rule for an id click ‘style applied to an
element with specified id attribute’
6 Beside the blank box click the drop down arrow.
You will see listed all the ids in use on the page.
If you want to use one of these click it. Else:
7 If you want to create a style for an id not yet in
use enter the name for the id in the box.
Creating a style rule for an id
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 29
8 Click ‘Create Style rule’
9 You are now presented
with a window headed
‘Selector’ followed by the
tag for the element. The
window actually lists the
style declarations for that id, but of course that
is now blank.
To apply an ID
While, in principle, ids are similar to classes it is
not possible to apply an id via the class selector box
but the method is still easy.
1 If necessary close CaScadeS
2 Click in the div to which you wish to apply the id
3 On the status bar click the <div> tag. If there is
more than one, select that furthest to the right.
Both the tag and the content of the div should be
highlighted
4 Without moving the cursor right-click and select
'id'
5 From the pop-up list select and click the id
required
Warning You can apply each id only once on a
page. KompoZer at version 0.7.10 will ensure
that this occurs however if you apply an id that
is already in use no warning is given and the id
will be applied as requested with the first in-
stance being removed.
4.3 Removing styles
CaScadeS allows you to remove styles in a similar
way to adding them.
In the ‘Sheets and rules’ pane select the rule
you want to remove and click ‘Remove’.
Similarly you can remove a stylesheet. Select the
sheet and click ‘Remove’. If you select an internal
stylesheet it is deleted from the file completely.
Warning this deletion cannot be ‘undone’.
If you remove an external stylesheet the link on the
page is removed irreversibly but the external file is left
intact.
4.4 Inheritance
A web page has a hierarchical structure e.g. text in
a table cell sits under the ‘Table'’. You see some of this
structure in ‘HTML Tags view’.
Inheritance means that style properties set at a
high level in the structure e.g. at ‘Body’ level will be
applied at lower levels unless specifically re-specified.
So a font family set the ‘Table’ element will be applied
to everything in the table but if you include a para-
graph in the table and set a different font for the ‘p’
element then that will be applied. Section 4.2.1.1 has
already shown a small demonstration of the effect.
Inheritance is very useful as it allows properties to
be set once in a style sheet rather than having to be
applied to every element that you want to use that
property.
You will have to consult a detailed specification
(such as appendix F ‘Full property table’ of the CSS2.1
specification) to see what is inherited and what is not
but, in general, you can assume that all properties are
inherited except things like Background, Border, Mar-
gin, Padding, Width and positioning.
4.5 The division <div> element
The <div> element has been mentioned only in
passing so far. A div establishes a ‘division’, i.e. a
section of a page, to contain a number of elements.
(Within the div styles are often applied in particular
ways as will be touched on later.) The remainder of
this section is not intended as a full explanation of
what a div is or how to use it rather it is an explanation
of how to create and populate a div using. Other
aspects of divs are likely to be beyond the interest of
beginners.
4.5.1 Creating divs
To create a div
1 Place the cursor where the div is to be created.
Note Do not try to create a div as the last item
on a page unless you do not need to add items
after it.
Note It may be easier to see what is happening
in HTML tags view with View > Block outline
selected.
2 Click the first drop-down box on format 1 toolbar.
3 Click the last option at the bottom of the list
Generic container (div).
4 The div is created formatted as body text.
It is now possible to insert any desired item into the
div e.g. Text or images. Text may then be selected and
formatted as paragraphs etc. If required, divs may be
inserted so that a set of nested divs is produced.
Sometimes difficulty may be experienced such that
elements in a div disappear when an attempt is made
to populate them. To avoid this, it is undesirable to
insert empty elements, so either insert, for example,
one paragraph at a time or enter some dummy text as
a placeholder.
To apply a class to a div
Proceed in the normal way (see section 4.2.3.1).
The class selector box may be used to apply a class to
a div but it will not display the class which has been
set. The preferred method to use is via the highlighted
tag on the status bar which can be used to add or
remove classes.
To inspect or change a class
Use the status bar to access the class.
Elements within a div may have styles applied in
the all the normal ways.
You can use the same technique to escape from
other block elements.
To leave a div
Click in any area out-
side the div. This is why a
div should never be the last
item on a page it will be
impossible to leave it ex-
cept to visit an item higher
on the page.
Unique divisions
A common use of divs is
for unique regions of a
page. Examples might be a
menu, a table of contents
or the main text area. In
such cases rather than applying a class to a div it is
more appropriate to use an ‘id’.
Tip: id names must
start with a letter oth-
erwise they may use
the same characters
as class names.
Tip: If you do get
‘trapped’ in the last divi-
sion on page need to
work between two touch-
ing divs in the flow there
is a way to escape. Click
on the last item in the
division and then on the
marker for the div on the
status bar. Next press
the down arrow key. This
will take the pointer to
below the div though the
cursor will not be visible.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 30
4.5.2 Styles within a div
A div is a useful way of applying a different set of
styles within a limited region on a page. Of course a set
of classes could be designed and applied to the ele-
ments within the region but this is laborious and bloats
the code. A simpler way is to establish a set of styles for
the elements in the div and to tag them in such a way
that they apply only within the div. This is done using
an appropriate selector. Suppose the div has a class
‘divclas’. Examples of appropriate selectors are:
div.divclas p
div.divclas td
div.divclas a:visited
Or when using ids
#menu p
#contents li
These may be set up in the same way as for pseudo-
classes see section 4.2.5.2.
4.5.3 Creating a layer using a div
In section 3.10.3 we noted that 'Layers' are con-
tained in 'divs'. In fact a layer is simply a div which has
a position, and optionally a z-index, style attached.
When KompoZer creates a layer it does so by attaching
an inline style to the div.
It is equally possible to create a layer by setting up
an appropriate class and attaching this to a div.
When a layer is created in this way KompoZer
depicts it as a normal layer and renders it with a
surrounding box with sizing and position handles.
Visually it is indistinguishable from any other layer.
Such layers may, of course be precisely located and
are not subject to the vagaries of manual dragging.
Warning If a layer, created using a class, is
subsequently dragged or resized, KompoZer at-
taches an inline style. Any styling so added will
override the class styling.
5 Scripts
Scripts are short programs that are included in
HTML documents (and consist of alphanumeric and
other characters) which can change the presentation
of pages in some way. Scripts must be written in an
appropriate script language but this does not form
part of the HTML specification. Support for scripting
language depends on the browser and/or server em-
ployed.
The most common scripting language is probably
JavaScript. It runs on the browser and most modern
browsers provide support but this can sometimes be
disabled if desired by the visitor.
Another common script is PHP. This runs on and
depends on support provided by the server. When
including PHP code authors should use the fuller tags
e.g. <? php ... ?> and not the short tags <? ... ?> which
KompoZer does not support.
KompoZer allows the use of scripts on pages but
does not respond to them. The effect of the script will
not be seen on the Normal, HTML Tags or Preview view
(but the code will of course appear in Source view).
To see the code at work click on ‘Browse’.
Note Some scripts include ‘special characters’
which, when encoded by KompoZer, result in
errors when the script runs. To avoid this, in
Tools > Preferences > Advanced, check the box
‘Don’t encode special characters in attribute
values’. You can find more in formation about
this in Appendix 6
In the menu there is a command Tools > JavaScript
Console - This Guide does not cover this.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 31
6 Inserts
The menu command Insert provides several op-
tions.
Image
See section 3.5.1.
Table
See section 3.6.1.
Form
See section 3.9.
Link
See section 3.7.
Named anchor
See section 3.7.1.3.
Horizontal line
Inserts a horizontal line across the width of a block
at the point selected. This doesn't have to be in the
simple default style you can define a class and apply
it to customise the line. Alternatively the Horizontal
Line Properties (double click on the line) allows the
width and height, alignment to be set. Colour can be
set via the Advanced Property editor using the ‘Inline
Styles’ tab and setting a value for ‘background-color’.
Characters and symbols
Provides a wide range of characters not readily
available from the keyboard including accented and
copyright. There is more about special characters in
Appendix 6.
Table of contents
Inserts a table of contents, based on heading styles
which can be selected. The table entries are linked to
the corresponding headings. See section 3.13.
Smart Widgets
If you're proud of your design and
that fact that KompoZer helped you, insert an image
and a link to publicise it.
Templates
See section 7.
HTML
Allows you to insert some hand-coded HTML code
at any point on a page. (If you want to add code in the
HEAD area you'll have to use ‘Source’ view instead.)
Note If you wish to insert HTML into your page
this is probably the safest way to do so. While
you can still make mistakes in the code Kom-
poZer will carry out some checks and ensure
that the result is valid HTML (whether or not
what you intended). Editing in Source view (see
section 3.16) can cause massive corruption of
your page.
PHP Code
Clicking opens a window into which PHP code may
be typed or copied. On closing, the code along with the
required php tags is added to the source code.
Note KompoZer does not support short tags like
<? ?> .
Comments
are commonly used by coders in order to improve
maintainability of code. Comments do not appear on a
page. KompoZer helpfully displays an exclamation
mark in viewing modes other than preview which when
hovered over reveals the content of the comment.
Break below images
If you have an image aligned right or left (with text
wrapping around it) this command breaks the wrap at
the point selected, the text continuing below the image.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 32
7 Templates
7.1 What are templates?
Templates are basically pages having some content
(e.g. a letter head) which can be re-used to create other
pages which will have the same underlying page struc-
ture and, often, the same graphical layout.
Templates are not altered in use and can be used
over and over again. The simplest template is probably
a blank sheet which links to a stylesheet for use
throughout a site. More common is a page which has
a banner and perhaps a menu to appear on every
page. Last might be a complete page layout for use on
all, or many, pages of a site but which includes areas
for customising individually.
Templates may be considered as having two parts
- the fixed part or ‘boilerplate’ which remains the same
for every page and the ‘editable part’ which changes.
KompoZer recognises two types of editable part.
Block and flow. Block items are like any other html
block and may consist of paragraph-like items or divs
(which may contain several blocks). Blocks may be
made repeatable - so that several similar items may be
added if required.
Flow items will be contained within other block
items in line with the text, for instance to change one
or two words in a paragraph.
7.2 Create a new template
Templates are prepared
and edited using KompoZer
just like any other page.
To create a template
1 Click File > New then
select ‘A blank tem-
plate’ and ‘Create’.
Note All templates will be
created with the Transitional HTML Doctype.
2 Add any content which is to appear on all pages
based on the template.
3 Format this in the normal way.
4 If the formatting is to be based on a style sheet
prepare this in the normal way as detailed in
section 4.2.4.
Note For this to be successful the template
must first be saved.
5 Add the areas which are to be made editable.
Fill these in using dummy text so that a complete
page layout is achieved even though some of it may be
meaningless. Format this as required.
Note Useful dummy text can be found at
http://www.lipsum.com/.
Note There are other approaches to page layout
but the method described is simple and reliable.
The first figure shows a page prepared as described.
7.3 Saving templates
To save a template
1. Click File > Save or File > Save As.
The extension ‘mzt’ will be selected automatically.
7.4 Create a template from a page
A pre-existing document may be transformed into
a template
1. Click Format > Page Title and Properties
2. Check the box ‘This page is a template’.
3. Click OK.
4. Click File > Save as. The file type ‘HTML
Template’ will be completed.
5. Name and save the file as normal.
7.5 Setting up template details
The content of the page
boilerplate and examples
of editable content should
already be set up and for-
matted.
To make blocks editable
1 In turn, select each
block that you wish
to make editable.
2 In HTML tags view
select the block by clicking its tag.
3 On the status bar right-click the corresponding
highlighted tag.
4 Click Templates > Make editable.
5 In the ‘Insert an editable area’ window give the
block a recognisable name. Now check the op-
tions boxes if required.
Note The option ‘Area is optional’ allows it to be
deleted easily when the page is in use. ‘Area is
repeatable’ allows copies to be made rapidly.
‘Area is moveable’ turns the area into a movable
layer (see section 3.10).
Warning In KompoZer 0.7.10 this option is dis-
abled
6 Click OK.
To make a flow selection editable
1 In turn select (highlight) each section of text that
you wish to make editable.
2 Click Insert > Templates >Insert editable area.
3 In the ‘Insert an editable area’ window give the
block a recognisable name.
4 Leave checked the option ‘Flow of text’.
5 Check the options boxes if required as described
above.
Note The option ‘Area is moveable’ is inappro-
priate for flow areas).
6 Click OK
When you have finished save the template as de-
scribed in section 7.3
The second figure (above) shows a template at this
stage. It has one non-repeatable block item The
program name, Two non-repeatable flow items The
Date and Language, Two repeatable flow items The
Changed areas and Other languages; the second of
these is optional.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 33
7.6 Using templates
To base a page on a template first ensure that the
template itself has been saved and closed a page
cannot be based on an open template.
Note All pages which KompoZer creates which
are based on templates are created as HTML
documents using the Transitional doctype. It is
not possible to create XHTML documents or
those with Strict doctypes from templates.
To create a page
1 Click File > New > A new document based on a
template > Choose File.
2 Select the Template (Note templates have the file
extension ‘mzt’)
3 Click ‘Create’.
The page that appears
carries
Boilerplate items
Labels for the editable
areas within coloured
rectangles (with
rounded upper cor-
ners)
Sample text (same as
the labels) within sur-
rounding editable box-
es (with dashed
borders).
To use the page
Warning – At KompoZer 0.7.10 the text for
repeatable items cannot be edited at this stage,
however copies may be made for editing later.
1 Click in turn in each editable areas.
2 Select and delete the
sample text and re-
place it with new text.
2a If the editable area
was repeatable a small
square appears within
the label, hovering
turns it red and click-
ing makes a copy. Copies have small circles
which act as delete buttons. The third figure
(above) illustrates the template with one flow
item (the Changed areas) repeated once. The first
three items have the text replaced.
2b If any area was optional a small circle with an
x appears within the label. Hovering turns it red
and clicking deletes it. The same figure shows
this for the ‘Other languages’. Because of the
limitation described it has not been possible to
fill in all the editable areas.
3 When all editable boxes have been completed
detach the page from the template by clicking
Edit > Detach from template. The page now
assumes its final appearance.
4 Save the page in the normal way. The last figure
shows the final result. The areas which could not
be edited earlier have been completed.
Now it is possible to edit any item and as a worka-
round the frozen repeatable items may be added.
7.7 Editing templates
Templates which have already been saved may be
altered after opening using menu commands File >
Open File and selecting ‘Files of Type’ then ‘HTML
Templates’.
Note The default opening setting is ‘HTML Files’
which will not open templates.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 34
8 Site Manager
8.1 Overview
The site manager allows you to navigate your site
or between sites easily.
To toggle the Site Manager on or off either press F9
or use View > Show/Hide > Site Manager.
Site Manager can deal with sites irrespective of
whether they reside on a local machine or on a remote
server. In the latter case, if you are on a dial-up
network, Site Manager will dial and make the connec-
tion for you. Since generally you will set up a site on a
local machine and later ‘publish’ to a remote server we
will deal first with setting up on a local machine.
Site Manager provides a directory tree view of a site
similar to the view with Windows Explorer. It however
lists only directories which you have specifically set up
as ‘Sites’. You can set up many sites, they appear in
Site Manager irrespective of where they appear in a
normal directory tree.
8.2 Setting up sites
To set up a new site (assuming that pages for the
site have already been created) open Site Manager,
click ‘Edit Sites’. This opens the ‘Publish Settings’
window.
Choose a convenient name for the site (You may
like to call it something like “My Site Local” to differen-
tiate it from a later “My Site Remote”) and enter it in
the box ‘Site Name’.
In the ‘Publishing server’ area click ‘Select directo-
ry’ and browse to the folder where the site is located,
select the folder and OK. The box should read some-
thing like ‘file:///C:/Documents …’ (Ignore the hint
line which applies to remote sites only.)
Leave the other boxes (Web site information, User
name etc.) blank.
Back in Site Manager in the column headed Name’
the new site should be listed and can be expanded to
show its contents.
8.3 Site Manager Functions
The main window lists all sites which have been set
up and, for any sites which have been expanded, the
files contained in it. (See figure.)
Double-click any site to expand it.
At the top of the Site Manager window a drop down
box allows you to view all files or to select to view only
html files (which includes htm files) or only image files
(these include gif, jpg, jpeg and png files).
For files it is possible to display the file size and
modified date. To select or de-select these options, in
the column heading click the right-most division and
select the options required (see figure). (You may have
to widen the site manager window to make this possible.)
It is not possible to change the order of the listing.
Double click on any html file to load it directly to
the page area for editing.
By using the buttons at the top of the Site Manager
window, and selecting a file if required, it is possible to
rename and delete files and to create folders.
Note all these actions alter the actual files
concerned. By using the ‘Edit Sites’ function
and the ‘Publish Settings’ window, sites may be
removed from the Site Manager but this has no
effect on the actual folders or files involved only
on the view in Site Manager.
8.4 Remote sites
Remote sites – on the server hosting a site may be
set up in almost exactly the same way as local sites
(see Section 8.2). This permits the same browsing,
display and editing functions as for a local site.
This time all the boxes on the ‘Publish Settings’
window must be completed. Hints are provided for the
content of each. The HTTP address will be used by the
Site Manager to find the site.
Warning Remember that any firewall in place
must allow KompoZer to access to the site.
Unfortunately KompoZer provides little help in
resolving any problems which arise while set-
ting up sites.
Site Manager layout
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 35
9 Setting preferences
9.1 Preferences
You can set up a number of features in KompoZer according to personal preferences. Several of the options
are grouped under the Tools > Optons menu. In addition you can customise toolbars via the View > Show/hide
menu.
Defaults
The defaults set by KompoZer will generally be found satisfactory.
Menu selection Default
Tools > Options > General
Maximum number of pages 10
Retain original source formatting Checked
Reformat HTML Source Cleared
Save images when saving pages Cleared
Always show publish dialog Cleared
Maintain table layout Checked
Use CSS styles Checked
Always open a document in a new tab Checked
Tools > Options > Fonts
Allow documents to use other fonts Checked
for others see text
Tools > Options > New Page settings
Author Blank (see below)
Reader's default colors Checked
Background image Blank (see below)
Language Blank (see below)
Writing direction No direction specified
Character set ISO-8859-1
Tools > Options > Advanced
Set up Proxies Direct connection
Markup - Language HTML 4
Markup - DTD Strict
Return in paragraph always creates new Checked
Underline misspelled words Checked
Output the following characters HTML4
Special characters Only & < > and no break space
Don't encode '>' outside attribute Cleared
Don't encode special characters Cleared
9.2 Editing preferences
KompoZer can be customised in several ways
through the Menu selection Tools > Options mecha-
nism.
All the options may be set at any time. All take
effect immediately except for ‘New page settings’ which
do not apply to any existing page.
General group
Retain original source formatting/Reformat HTML
Source
If you reformat the source some tags will be indent-
ed for easier reading but extra blank lines will be
inserted. Note that the source view and the actual file
content do not agree exactly.
Save images and other associated files when saving
pages.
When saving a file to a new location using ‘Save as
…’ if this box is checked the images and style sheets
will be saved to the same folder as the page. This may
be useful occasionally but, where a site is structured
with different kinds of files in different folders, that
structure will not be preserved.
Warning. Not only will the files not be copied to
the file structure specified in the source file but
the new saved file will be altered to reflect the
new (flat) structure. If you wish to use more
complex structure on your site, checking this
box will inflict considerable damage to your file
necessitating a lot of rework. The original file in
the original location will however remain as
designed.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 36
Always show publish dialog when publishing pages
If checked, KompoZer always displays the Publish
Page dialog box when you Publish a page. If not
checked, KompoZer only displays the dialog box if it
needs more information in order to publish the page.
Maintain table layout when inserting or deleting
cells
Tables are normally created as a regular matrix i.e.
every row has the same number of cells. With this box
checked inserting a cell in one row should also insert
cells in other rows to maintain regularity. With Kom-
poZer 0.7.10 this does not work.
Use CSS styles instead of HTML elements and
attributes attributes
Originally HTML formatted pages using elements
and attributes. Many of these are not allowed when
using strict doctypes but CSS provides alternatives
and greater flexibility.
Always open a document in a new tab
When opening pages KompoZer normally creates a
new tab to hold it. If this box is checked when a page
is opened using Site Manager a new instance of Kom-
poZer is created to open the page. The previous in-
stance remains available. This does not apply when
pages are opened by other means.
Fonts
In the absence of a definition of the font to be used
a browser will make a choice on some basis built in to
the browser. KompoZer acts in the same way and this
area allows customisation of the choice made. If the
box ‘Allow documents to use other fonts’ is checked
KompoZer will use the font specified in the style or
other means. If the box is unchecked KompoZer will
not respect styles and will use a font from the list
specified on the upper part of this window.
The boxes specifying sizes and screen resolution
appear not to work.
New page settings
These define several of the settings used when
creating new pages. (Others will be found on the
‘Create a new document or template’ window which
appears via the File > New menu.)
Author's name Set this if you want the author’s
name to appear in the head section of all pages. (For a
specific page this may be set using Format > Page Title
and Properties.)
Readers default colors Leave this checked. The
alternative of ‘Use custom colors’ allows the colours of
links to be specified but uses deprecated attributes
which are not permitted for pages using strict doctype.
CSS styles provide alternative means of doing the
same thing. (Section 4.2.5.2).
Background imageSet this if you want a partic-
ular background for all pages.
Language – The main language for the page should
be set to facilitate use by automated tools, for instance
speech synthesisers. Many languages offer regionali-
sation alternatives, either select one of these or use the
generic.
Writing direction – Usually this may be left at the
default of ‘No direction specified’. Setting the language
defines the writing direction.
Character set Normally for western languages
leave this set to the default of ISO-8859-1. If in doubt
set to UTF-8. You can find more about choice of
encoding in Appendix 6.
Note This is badly entitled. It should read
‘Character encoding’. Though it sets a ‘charset’
parameter it dos not define a character set.
Advanced
Set up Proxies – For most people click ‘Connection
settings’ and ensure that ‘Direct connection’ is
checked. If you need to set up proxies refer to Kom-
poZer Help.
Markup The Markup language and doctype may
be set as desired. I have recommended the use of Strict
HTML.
Note Properly this should be included under
New page Settings. NB It does not alter an
existing page.
Return in paragraph always creates new para-
graph The action of the Return (Enter) key in or at
the end of text objects is described in the following
table.
Return in Return at end Return in Return at end
Paragraph of paragraph heading of heading
Box New New New Body
checked paragraph paragraph heading
Box New New New Body
cleared line line heading
When the box is checked it is possible to create a
new line in or at the end of a paragraph or heading by
pressing Shift+Enter.
When the box is cleared it is possible to escape
from a paragraph by pressing the Return key twice.
This creates a new paragraph but also leaves a line
break at the end of the previous paragraph. Most
people will prefer to leave the box checked.
The action of the return key in other circumstances
depends on the context, for instance in a table cell it
generates a new line, in a list it creates a new list item.
Underline misspelled words When set this is a
useful reminder to poor spellers or typists who forget
to run the spell checker separately, however it con-
sumes resources which may slow the system, in par-
ticular the time taken to switch between views may
become excessive. It is usually better to clear this
setting.
Output the following characters as entitiesIn
normal use this should be set as recommended. No
setting will damage a file but other settings are intend-
ed for use only during development of pages.
Don't encode '>' outside attribute Set as recom-
mended.
Don't encode special characters as entitiesSet
as recommended.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 37
9.3 Toolbars
Customising Toolbars
The list below shows the buttons, and the corre-
sponding icons, available on KompoZer toolbars. The
buttons are normally located on the toolbar indicated.
A button may not be installed by default in which case
the bar may be customised to make it available.
You can view or hide the toolbars. On the Menu Bar
select View > Show/hide then check which toolbar you
wish to display. You cannot hide the menu bar.
You can customise the toolbars to change which
items appear on them. To do so right-click on the bar
and select ‘Customize’ then drag an item to or from the
toolbar.
As you customise a toolbar you can select whether
you wish to display small or large icons. This selection
is specific to each bar.
When customising toolbars three additional sym-
bols will be found. ‘Separator’ provides a vertical bar to
separate sections on a toolbar, ‘Space’ provides an
invisible space of fixed size. ‘Flexible space’ provides a
space which will expand to fill any space available.
New file
Open file
Save file
Publish
Browse
Undo
Redo
Insert or edit
named anchor
Insert or edit
link
Insert or edit
image
Insert or edit
table
Insert or edit
form
Open
CaScadeS
Buttons on Composition toolbar
Text & back-
ground colour
Highlight
colour
Make
text
larger
Make
text
smaller
Bold
text
Italic
text
Under-
line text
Align text
left
Align text
centre
Align text
centre
Justify
text
Buttons on Format 2 toolbar
Cut
Copy Paste
Print page
Find
Insert hori-
zontal line
Check
Spelling
Borders
Left to right
Right to
left
Glue to
left border
Stay in
centre
Glue to
right border
Glue to
top border
Stay in
middle
Glue to
bottom
Buttons not normally installed
Buttons at extreme right of toolbar
Layer
Bring
forward
Send back
Emphasise
Strong
emphasis
Numbered
list
Bulleted list Indent text
Outdent text
Definition
term
Definition
description
Buttons on Format 1 toolbar
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 38
Menu alternatives
Since the Composition Toolbar is often the
simplest way of carrying out a function this
guide has generally assumed that buttons
available for that bar are visible. If you have
disabled the Composition or Format toolbar or
a button, functions may be still accessed via
the Menu bar. The corresponding selections
are shown in the table. If there is a shortcut
key (with control key) it is also listed.
Button Menu bar selection Shortcut
with Ctrl
Anchor Insert > Named anchor
Align center Format > Align > Center
Align justify Format > Align > Justify
Align left Format > Align > Left
Align right Format > Align > Right
Bold Format > Text style > Bold B
Browse File > Browse page
Bulleted list Format > List > Bulleted
Choose color for text Format > Text Color
Choose color for background n/a
Choose highlight color for text n/a
Copy Edit > Copy C
Cut Edit > Cut X
Find Edit > Find F
Form Insert > Form
Horizontal Line Insert > Horizontal line
Image Insert > Image
Indent text Format > Increase indent ]
Italic Format > Text style > Italic I
Larger font size Format > Font size > Larger +
Link Insert > Link L
New File > New N
Numbered list Format > List > Numbered
Open File > Open File O
Outdent text Format > Decrease indent [
Paste Edit > Paste V
Print File > Print P
Publish File > Publish
Save File > Save S
Smaller font size Format > Font size > Smaller -
Spell Edit > Spell checking K
Table Insert > Table
Underline Format > Text style > Underline U
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 39
10 Publishing
Tip. Those having access to only one computer running
Windows XP may like to know that they can run several
versions of Internet Explorer on it. Joe Maddalone
(http://www.positioniseverything.net/articles/multiIE.html)
developed the method and Yousif Al Saif
(http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE) has produced an in-
staller. Initially this did not run on Windows Vista but a
method of doing so has been developed.
10.1 Introduction
Publishing a site means transferring the site, i.e.
the pages, images and stylesheets involved, to a web
server from which they may be accessed, usually but
not necessarily, by the public. This process is called
‘Uploading’. Prior to publishing there are a few checks
which should be carried out.
10.2 Validating the site.
Validating simply means checking that the page or
site operates as intended. Designers may by now have
a plethora of files some of which are obsolete or are not
required for the published site. A good practice is to
create a new folder structure and in it place those files,
and only those files, which are needed.
This can be done using your usual file manager e.g.
Windows Explorer but the KompoZer File Manager can
be set up to do this task by ‘Publishing’ these to a new
folder.
10.2.1 Markup Cleaner
KompoZer provides a Markup Cleaner Tools >
Markup Cleaner which can be used to remove redun-
dant code which clutters the file but does not contrib-
ute to the page content. This does not necessarily
remove all redundant content but makes a good con-
tribution to it.
10.2.2 Browser testing
The next stage of validation has already been taken
care of by KompoZer. Users have a high assurance
that the code generated represents valid HTML or CSS.
The site should next be run using a browser. Possible
problems include you having omitted to transfer files
to the correct folders, naming the folders incorrectly,
including getting the case wrong.
The site should be checked on a range of different
browsers. Several modern Mozilla based browsers
behave very similarly so do not provide additional
confidence. Check with browsers from other sources
and be very conscious that a few visitors may still be
using very old browsers.
In late 2007 a minimal set of browsers to test on
might be Firefox (latest version), Opera (latest version),
Internet Explorer 6 and Internet Explorer 7. Both
these latter two behave differently from each other and
also from other browsers so use both. In spite of the
availability of Internet Explorer 7 version 6 remains
the most widely deployed so it is essential to check
with this.
10.2.3 Formal validation
Browsers are often very tolerant of incorrect code.
A much more rigorous test is to submit pages to the
W3C validators. There are two: one checks that the
page code conforms to the HTML specification, the
second that the style sheet (internal and external
linked) code conforms to the CSS specification. Kom-
poZer provides direct access to the first of these.
To validate a page. Open it in KompoZer. On the
Menu choose Tools > Validate HTML. A validator win-
dow opens and the page is automatically submitted for
validation. The result will be displayed in the window.
To validate pages with internal stylesheets or sepa-
rate external stylesheets the validators may be used
independently. The URLs are given in the References
(Appendix 2). Pages may be validated either from the
local disk or after the files have been uploaded.
While the W3C validators check rigorously for con-
formity with specifications this does not guarantee
that the code will run correctly. Unfortunately none of
the current browsers fully support the specifications!
This is why browser validation is an essential step.
10.3 Publishing
You can publish your web pages to a web server on
which you have an account. Your ISP probably offers
limited free space but you can buy space from profes-
sional hosting providers.
To publish a site you need to know the settings for
the space so that you can set up your system.
Files may be uploaded using any available FTP
program but KompoZer has built-in facilities which
are integrated with the Site Manager which makes this
task very simple.
While uploading using KompoZer is simple the
facilities and the folder structures supported are limit-
ed. You may prefer to use one of the available open
source or freeware FTP programs.
10.3.1 Setting up your site
While setting up Site Manager you may already
have configured the ‘remote’ site (sections 8.4 and
8.2), if not, either proceed as detailed there, go directly
to Publish Settings via Edit > Publishing Site settings.
Confirmation of correct publication Enter the fol-
lowing details:
In the ‘Site names’ box enter the name that you
want to know the site by.
HTTP address (URL) of your site. From your ISP
(see hints).
Publishing address - This is the ftp address to
which you will publish.
User name – From your ISP.
Password – From your ISP.
If you wish to, check ‘Save Password’.
If you have several sites set up and you have one
site that you always or usually publish to you may
wish to click on the name of this site then ‘Set as
default’. This simplifies uploading.
Click OK.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 40
10.3.2 Uploading
Open the page that you want to upload. An easy
way to do this is from the Site Manager.
1 Click the ‘Publish’ button.
2 On the ‘Publish Page’ window on the ‘Publish’
tab, if it is not your default, in the ‘Site name’
box select the site to which you want to publish.
The ‘Page title’ and ‘File name’ should already be
completed.
3 If the page is to be uploaded to a sub-directory,
rather than the root directory, enter the name of
a sub-directory and any of the other data if
required.
Note This directory must exist. KompoZer can-
not create it.
4 If it is the first time to upload the page, and if it
includes images or uses external style sheets,
check the box ‘Include images and other files’. (If
it is not the first time and these other files have
not changed the box may be left unchecked.) The
files will be placed in the same directory as the
page. If you want them to go in a sub-directory
check the box ‘Use this site sub-directory’ and
name the directory. In this case the directory will
be created if needed.
Note this is a sub-directory of the root directory
not any directory detailed in the previous point.
If you want to use such a directory this must be
explicitly detailed e.g.
pagesubdirectory/filessubdirectory/
Note all the Images and style sheets will be
placed in the same directory. This is the only
arrangement supported by the Site Manager
Publisher.
5 You should not need to refer to the ‘Settings’ tab
as the data should be collected via the Site name
you have selected but you may view the data and
change if you wish.
6 Click ‘Publish’. A ‘Publishing’ window will appear
and uploading will commence. (If you are on a
dial-up connection this will be connected.)
7 Within a short time you should receive confirma-
tion of correct publication similar to the first
figure above.
8 One possible source of problems occurs if you
are prevented from accessing the site by a fire-
wall. In this case you may receive a ‘Publishing
failed’ message similar to that shown in the
second figure.
The ‘Troubleshooting’ button takes you to the Kom-
poZer help system but this is short of aid in this area
at present.
Other possible problems include
Some required files are missing
File or directory names incorrect e.g. Wrong case
Once you have published a page, if you need to
publish it again, your settings (e.g. subdirectories)
should be remembered by KompoZer. You will not see
steps 2 to 4 again unless changes have been made to
the page.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 41
Appendix 1 – Glossary
This Glossary defines terms as used in this docu-
ment. As far as possible, when terms used also occur
in the HTML or CSS specifications, they have the same
meanings as in those specifications. In such cases
more precise definitions may be obtained there.
ASCII
American Standard Code for information Inter-
change. Defines a set of 95 printable characters.
BMP
Basic Multilingual plane.
Button
A small picture, or icon, which when clicked results
in an action. KompoZer buttons are of various shapes.
CaScadeS
The CSS editor that comes with KompoZer.
CSS
Cascading Style Sheets.
Declaration
The second part of a style rule. Contains format
details of the style.
Deprecated
A feature marked as deprecated is one which is
considered obsolete, and whose use is discouraged.
Generally CSS provides better features. Transitional
Document types allow the use of deprecated features.
(The ‘Strict’ type does not.)
Directory
Equivalent to what Windows calls a ‘folder’.
Doctype
Document type Declaration - see appendix 3.
DTD
Document type Definition - see appendix 3.
Element
A small part of a web page such as a paragraph or an
image which can be manipulated by a browser in
ways determined by the code associated with the
element.
Extension
The final section of a filename (after the dot) indicat-
ing the type of file.
FTP
File Transfer Protocol. Used to transfer files to a server.
Handle
Symbols, usually small squares, on the edges of
sizing boxes which, when clicked, allow the size or
position to be dragged.
HTML
HyperText Markup Language. The publishing lan-
guage of the World Wide Web.
ISP
Internet Service Provider.
KompoZer
The open source software package available at
http://kompozer.sourceforge.net/, on which this
guide is based.
Mozilla
I use the term to refer to a number of similar browsers
including Netscape 6 and later, Mozilla and Firefox.
MSIE
Microsoft Internet Explorer. The browser from Micro-
soft Corporation.
Non-breaking space
A space character which, though invisible, acts as a
normal character in that a ‘word’ which includes a
non-breaking space will not be split to wrap a line.
Nvu
A predecessor software package on which KompoZer
is based. The final version available at
http://www.nvu.com/, contains bugs which are
gradually being eliminated in each new version of
KompoZer.
Quirks Mode
For documents with transitional doctype MSIE offers
two modes of operation ‘Standards mode’ and
‘Quirks mode’. In quirks mode it emulates the behav-
iour of MSIE5. Quirks mode is triggered when the
doctype does not comply with the specification and
omits the DTD.
Selector
The first part of a style rule. (May be thought of as the
name of the rule.)
Sizing box
A box, denoted by small squares, (Handles) which in
KompoZer appears around some items when clicked.
See also ‘Handle’.
Strict
see ‘Deprecated’.
Stylesheet
A text file, that may be a part of the page in use, that
describes the position, appearance or behaviour of
some or all of the html elements of which the page
consists. Some terms used in developing stylesheets
are explained in section 4.2.1
Tab (window)
Part of many window structures which emulate the
tab on a paper filing system designed to give quick
access to part of the file. If a tab is clicked a new
display will appear within the same window.
Tab (key)
The keyboard key intended to emulate the action of
the tab key on a typewriter.
Tag
A piece of code in a web page associated with an
element. Typically each element has a start tag and
an end tag. Tags include the element name and are
surrounded by angle brackets. E.g. <p> and </p>.
UCS
Universal character set. A set of about 100,000 characters.
Upload (ing)
The process of transferring web files from a local
computer to the computer which will host them on
the web.
URL
Uniform Resource Locator. The web address of an
item.
W3C
World Wide Web Consortium http://www.w3.org/ A
consortium of the 500 biggest IT corporations who got
together to define specifications and recommenda-
tions so that languages like HTML or CSS can inter-
operate without problems on different platforms, de-
vices, operating systems and media.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 42
Appendix 2 – References
HTML 4.01 Specification http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/cover.html
CSS2.1 Specification http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/
W3C http://www.w3.org/
HTML Validator http://validator.w3.org/
CSS Validator http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/
Appendix 3 – Doctypes
A3.1 Introduction
Doctype abbreviates ‘Document type Declaration’
which tells a browser which ‘Document type definition’
(DTD) to use to interpret a page. The Doctype also
includes the URL of a file containing the DTD details.
The Doctype must appear on the first line of code
for a page.
Note Actually on an XHTML page an XML dec-
laration may precede this but this can result in
problems with some browsers. KompoZer does
not insert this declaration. Files without an
XML declaration use UTF-8 character coding.
A3.2 Doctypes supported
The Doctypes supported by KompoZer are
HTML Transitional
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
HTML Strict
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
XHTML Transitional
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
XHTML Strict
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
To set the Doctype for a new file:
On the menu bar click File > New and check the appropriate boxes.
A3.3 Differences between transitional
and strict DTD
In HTML 4.01 strict, elements and attributes which
are dedicated to presentation are deprecated in favour
of CSS. Therefore, HTML 4.01 strict is actually a
trimmed version of HTML 4.01 and is likely to be
supported by a larger number of user agents and
media. The features which have been trimmed out can
be replaced using CSS so that no functionality is lost.
The benefits of clear separation of content from
presentation thanks to CSS implementation are:
Smaller files and faster download (Note 1)
Better layout control
Better interoperability across platforms, devices
and media (Note 2)
Easier to maintain
A3.4 Choice of language and DTD
Beginners to web authoring often ask ‘Which doc-
type declaration should I use?’
When working on pre-existing documents KompoZ-
er is capable of working with any of the doctypes
supported and you may continue to use these if you
want to avoid upgrading to a preferred format.
When creating a new document my recommenda-
tion is to use HTML 4.01 strict doctype.
I do not recommend XHTML 1.0 doctype declara-
tions (transitional or strict) unless you know that you
need to serve your web page as content type
application/xhtml+xml.
Note Internet Explorer 6 and Internet Explorer
7 will not serve a document as content type
application/xhtml+xml when the proper con-
tent type for XHTML should be
application/xhtml+xml.
Further explanation on why XHTML is not recom-
mended at least at present would go beyond the
scope of this User Guide.
People who want to know more on this issue are
recommended to read the following resources:
Say No to XHTML: an excellent article on mis-
understood claims of XHTML at least, on
serious misunderstandings about XHTML - and
problems related to XHTML.
http://www.spartanicus.utvinternet.ie/no-
xhtml.htm
Beware of XHTML Another excellent article,
worth reading carefully. It has 16 examples and
demonstrations showing the issues involved.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 43
http://www.webdevout.net/articles/beware_of_
xhtml.php
Sending XHTML as text/html Considered Harm-
ful from Ian Hickson, author of Web Hypertext
Application Technology, Applications 1.0.
http://www.hixie.ch/advocacy/xhtml
XHTML is dead from Tommy Olsson.
http://www.autisticcuckoo.net/archive.php?id
=2005/03/14/xhtml-is-dead
XHTML's Dirty Little Secret from Mark Pilgrim
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/03/19/dive
-into-xml.html
XHTML - What's the point? from Henri Sivonen
http://hsivonen.iki.fi/xhtml-the-point/
Even if you are working on an existing document
you may consider that it is worth whatever additional
work would be required to upgrade to using the HTML
4.01 strict doctype. The benefits of using web stand-
ards (W3C recommendations and language specifica-
tions regarding web page authoring) are numerous,
important, often underestimated and often misunder-
stood.
Using Web Standards in Your Web Pages
(http://www.mozilla.org/docs/web-developer/
upgrade_2.html#benefitsusingstandards) is an excel-
lent introduction to this issue which deserves careful
study.
A3.5 KompoZer capability
KompoZer can create pages using any of these
doctypes. Pages created from Templates are always
generated using HTML 4.01 Transitional doctype.
Note It may be possible to edit a template exter-
nal to KompoZer and change the doctype so that
pages created from it use the corresponding
Doctype. I have not tested this.
HTML pages created will offer, on saving, the ‘html’
extension. XHTML pages will also offer ‘xhtml’ exten-
sion. Regarding XHTML pages, the choice is important
as an xhtml file extension will lead browsers to serve
such document as content type
application/xhtml+xml. If you save your XHTML docu-
ment with the "html" file extension, then your XHTML
document will be served as text/html.
KompoZer can open and edit pages with any of
these doctypes. The doctype is not editable but Kom-
poZer will not change any doctype encountered.
When creating and editing documents, KompoZer
will generate code which is appropriate to the doctype
declared using only appropriate elements and at-
tributes. This means that some features may be disa-
bled or be inaccessible depending on the type of
document encountered. Typically this may necessitate
the use of a CSS style to obtain some effect which is not
accessible using an HTML attribute.
KompoZer cannot convert from one doctype to an-
other so, if the doctype is not consistent with the code
on the page the result will be unreliable. It is because
KompoZer cannot convert doctypes that I suggest that
you continue with the existing doctype when working
on pre-existing documents . If you do wish to convert a
page it is possible to take content from one document
to another with a different doctype by cutting and
pasting in normal view. However, when you paste, you
must use the ‘Paste without formatting’ option and
reapply all the formats needed. Whether or not you
take this option will depend on circumstances.
A3.6 Browser responses
While browsers will render pages irrespective of the
doctype, detailed differences in response occur.
Doctype switching by David Hammond has the
results of some excellent research and documenting
the responses of all the main current browsers.
Information for older browsers was provided by
Henri Sivonen.
CSS Enhancements in Internet Explorer 6 gives
fuller details for this browser.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 44
Appendix 4 Installing KompoZer and extensions
A4.1 Installing KompoZer
The program may be downloaded from KompoZer's
web site http://kompozer.sourceforge.net/.
The site does not offer an installer but J C Steele
has provided one for KompoZer 0.7.10. It is available
from
http://ww2.coastal.edu/jcsteele/kompozer/
With an installer available:
1 Download the Windows full installer from the
downloads page
2 Save the program wherever you wish. Possibly
in My Documents\Downloads
3 Double click the file to start the installation
process
4 Answer the prompts. You will probably want to
install to C:\Program Files\KompoZer
If no installer is available:
1 Download the Win32 tarball
2 Save the program wherever you wish. Possibly
in My Documents\Downloads. The file will have
the extension 'zip'
3 Decide on the folder in which you wish to install
the files - probably C:\Program Files\KompoZer
4 Double click the 'zip' file and extract to the
required location
5 In the same location find the file `kompozer.exe'
6 Create a shortcut to this and place it either on
the desktop or the taskbar
The program may now be run by clicking the
shortcut. The first time it is run it will create a 'profile'.
(See next section.)
Note With earlier versions of KompoZer you were
advised not to run Nvu and KompoZer simultaneously.
This no longer applies.
A4.2 Reinstalling/updating
It is not expected that Nvu will be updated after
version 1.0 but you may need to upgrade from an
earlier version or possibly to repair a broken installa-
tion.
Nvu stores a number of settings in files located in
the 'Profiles' folder. KompoZer does the same thing
and maintains a separate, independent profiles folder.
The profile includes:
Some default settings
Details of the sites which you have set up in
'Site Manager'
Publishing Site Settings
Details of any add-ons installed
Your custom spelling dictionary.
The Nvu team recommend that this folder be delet-
ed prior to installing a new version of Nvu. This means
that these settings will be lost and have to be re-
entered following the new installation. It is advisable
to follow this recommendation.
The default profiles folder is located at
%AppData%\Nvu (i.e. Something like c:\Documents
and Settings\<login settings>\Application Data\Nvu).
(Similarly for KompoZer.)
The procedure for updating is therefore (applicable
to Nvu only)
1. Download the latest version of the program
2. Make sure that you have a record of your
Publishing site settings
3. De-install the program in the usual way e.g.
From Start > Settings > Control panel > Add or remove
Programs.
4. Delete the profiles folder.
5. Install the new version of Nvu
6. Set up Site Manager and Publishing Settings
A4.3 Installing extensions
There are a small number of extensions available
for KompoZer including alternative spelling dictionar-
ies.
Extensions are installed differently from normal
programs. the procedure is as follows:
Locate the web page from which the extension
may be downloaded
Download and save save the extension on your
hard drive using the link 'Save link target as...'.
Launch KompoZer.
Tools > Extensions > Install.
Browse to the folder where the extension file is
located and select the file.
In the window that opens click 'Install now'.
Close and relaunch KompoZer.
If you have extensions installed you may some-
times wish to run KompoZer without the extension.
For this you need to have one profile which has the
extension installed and one without. Managing profiles
explains how to achieve this.
A4.4 Managing profiles
Set up profiles windowIn order to manage profiles
you must start KompoZer with profiles enabled.
To enable profiles:
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 45
1 Right click the shortcut icon which you use to
start the program.
2 Click 'Properties'.
3 On the shortcut tab .`Target' will show some-
thing like
"C:\Program Files\Kompozer\kompozer.exe".
4 Change this by adding a space followed by -p to
read something like
"C:\Program Files\Kompozer\kompozer.exe" -p
If you use more than one shortcut route you have
can set others in the same way.
When you launch the program you will now get a
window like that shown in the figure.
You can launch the program from here but you may
prefer first to add other profiles.
To add a profile:
1 Click the 'Create Profile' button
2 Answer the prompts
You will be offered the opportunity of giving the
profile a more meaningful name. You will also have the
opportunity of selecting where you wish to store the
files for the profile. If you change this to somewhere in
My Documents it may be easier to manage your routine
backups.
Note You should create a dedicated folder for
each profile.
You can also rename and delete profiles as shown
in the second figure.
Before you add any additional profiles the 'Default
profile' will be the profile that you were previously
using. It will include all the customisations that you
had prepared.
Any additional profiles added will be created in a
'virgin' state with none of your history included. You
will therefore have to add any site manager and pub-
lishing settings that you wish. Because of this you may
prefer to set up additional profiles for specific purposes
and retain others for more basic functions.
[I AM GRATEFUL TO NEIL PARKS ON THE WYSI FORUM
FOR SOME OF THE ABOVE INFORMATION.]
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 46
Appendix 5 – Revision History
17-December-2007
At the date of issue this version contained the same
information, with one exception, as the HTML version
of that date. The difference is that this document omits
all methods which are specific to Nvu (as distinct from
KompoZer) because these are now of historical interest
only.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 47
A6.1 Introduction
Encoding refers to the details of how the characters
in the source file for a web page are coded for transmis-
sion over the web. For the most part the author can
leave all the details to be handled by KompoZer or the
browser. This leaves a few options available to the
author these generally provide a means of optimising a
file only in rare cases do they affect functionality.
A6.2 Quick start
KompoZer defaults to using ISO-8859-
1 encoding with the following settings.
You may check or reset this as follows.
Use Format > Page Title and Prop-
erties and in the Internationaliza-
tion area see that the ‘Character
set’ box reads ‘ISO-8859-1’. To
change it using the drop down
menu ' Choose a charset'.
Use Tools > Preferences> Advanced
and in the ‘Special characters area
check that ‘Output the following
characters as entities’ is set to
‘Only & < > and non-breakable
whitespace’.
For the two check boxes below this:
Clear ‘Don't encode > outside of
attribute values’
Check ‘Don't encode special char-
acters in attribute values’.
These settings are completely suitable
for pages using English and adequate,
though not necessarily optimised, for
most other languages used in Western
and Northern Europe.
If using an other European language
and some other languages a different
selection from ISO-8859 may be prefera-
ble. KompoZer offers the full available
range. Wikipedia [Ref 14] has a useful
article detailing the coverage.
A6.3 Encoding text
A6.3.1 ASCII and Latin 1 characters
Early computers used the ASCII (American Stand-
ard Code for Information Interchange) which provides
a set of 95 printable characters dating from the tele-
printer era. An eight bit byte however allows a doubling
of this number (while reserving a number of codes for
control purposes) and gives rise to the Latin-1 set
illustrated in table A6.3-1. The row and column head-
ings indicate the more and less significant parts of the
code (in hexadecimal) corresponding to each character.
For instance, the code for character 'A' is 41.
Latin-1 corresponds to the ISO-8859-1 set which is
sufficient for web pages in English and many other
western European languages. Include the appropriate
code in a file and the corresponding character will
appear.
A6.3.2 ISO-8859
The needs of many languages, European and other,
can be satisfied by similar sets of characters, all share
the ASCII characters and substitute some in other
positions. This give rise to 15 standards in the ISO-
8859 series. You can find which language, along with
the list of characters, supported by each encoding in
the Wikipedia article [Ref 9] referred to above.
To implement this it is clear that more than 256
characters are needed although only 256 locations
(less control positions) are available to address them.
The characters required to satisfy all in the series are
drawn from a much larger set.
A6.3.3 Universal Character Set
The Unicode Consortium [Ref 17] have standardised
a universal character set (UCS), i.e. a standard that
defines, in one place, all the characters needed for
writing the majority of living languages in use on
computers. It aims to be, and to a large extent already
is, a superset of all other character sets that have been
encoded.
Unicode (as the UCS is commonly referred to) can
access over a million characters of which about
100,000 have already been defined. These include
characters for all the world's main languages along
with a selection of symbols for various purposes.
HTML specifies a Document Character Set which is
a list of the character repertoire available along with
the corresponding code points (sometimes referred to
as code positions). For HTML (and XHTML) the Docu-
ment Character Set is identical to the UCS which
Appendix 6 – Character Encoding
x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 xA xB xC xD xE xF
0x
1x
A
2x
sp
! # $ % & ( ) * + , - . / S L
3x
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < > = ? C
4x
@
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O I A
5x
P Q R S T U V
W
X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ I
6x
` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o T
7x
p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~
8x
I
9x
Ax
nb
sp
! ¢ £ ¤ ¥ ¦ §
¨
© ª « ¬
shy
® ¯ N
Bx
° ± ² ³ ´ µ · ¸ ¹ º » ¼ ½ ¾ ¿
Cx
À Á Â Ã Ä Å
Æ
Ç È É Ê Ë Ì Í Î Ï 1
Dx
Ð Ñ Ò Ó Ô Õ Ö × Ø Ù Ú Û Ü Ý Þ ß
Ex
à á â ã ä å æ ç è é ê ë ì í î ï
Fx
ð ñ ò ó ô õ ö ÷ ø ù ú û ü ý þ ÿ
Table A6.3.1
Printable ASCII and Latin 1 characters
Hex code for character MSD in row lsd in column
The characters sp (space), nbsp, (No-break space),
shy (soft hyphen) are printable but (normally) invisible.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 48
means that, in principle, any character in the
UCS may be used in any HTML document. In
practice support for the complete character
range is uneconomic and systems provide
support for subsets only.
A6.3.4 Character Encoding
Character Encoding, at its simplest, refers
to the process whereby the codes for the char-
acters are mapped to the code points for the
Unicode characters appropriate to the lan-
guage in use. In the case of ISO-8859-1 the
character codes are mapped to identical Uni-
code code points. (The first 256 Unicode char-
acters being the same as the Latin-1 set.) As
another example, ISO-8859-7 encodes Greek
characters displacing many from the Latin-1
set to make room. (Compare table A6.3-2 to
table A6.3-1.) In this case the code EA instead
of being mapped to Unicode code point EA
(giving e circumflex ê) is mapped to code point
03BA which returns a small kappa . In fact
ISO-8859-7 does not include the ê character.
All ISO-8859 encodings retain the ASCII
characters at the original positions.
The HTML version of this document uses
ISO-8859-1 encoding but, in spite of this, has
no difficulty in representing the full repertoire
of the Greek characters covered by ISO-8859-
7 as can be seen in the table. How this is
achieved is explained in the next section.
Authors should note that every page uses one
character encoding, and one only, irrespective of
the number or range of languages encountered on a
page.
In HTML pages character encoding is specified us-
ing the 'charset' parameter in the head area for each
page. Several options are permissible but KompoZer
always uses the form <meta http-equiv= "content-type"
content= "text/html; charset=ISO-8859-7">.
Note 'charset', in spite of its name, does not
specify a character set. The character set for
HTML documents is always the UCS. 'charset'
specifies the encoding.
A6.3.5 Character references
ISO-8859 uses a single byte per character to repre-
sent all the characters commonly expected in a lan-
guage but clearly there may be a need to represent
uncommon characters. HTML provides two mecha-
nisms - Character entity references (entities) and nu-
meric character references. Using these methods any
character in the UCS may be reached by using a
sequence of ASCII characters to point to the required
character. Entities take the form &euro; and numeric
references the form &#8364; or &#x20AC; all repre-
senting the euro symbol. The 8464 and x20AC repre-
sent the Unicode code point for the symbol in decimal
and hexadecimal notation.
These methods free the author to employ Unicode
characters, irrespective of the encoding in use, at the
expense of increasing file size. Where such use is
limited this is inconsequential.
The list of entities is included at section 24 of the
HTML specification [Ref 16]. About 250 are defined,
numeric character references must be used for charac-
ters outside this range. Characters do not have to be
out of range of the encoding for entity references to be
provided as is clear from Table A6.3-3 which lists some
of the most frequently used including some in the
ASCII set.
Table A6.3-3
Important entity references
Character Entity Numeric character
reference
&euro; &#8364; &#x20AC;
< &lt; &#60; &#x3c;
> &gt; &#62; &#x3e;
× &times; &#215; &#xd7;
÷ &divide; &#247; &#xf7;
& &amp; &#38; &#x26;
" &quot; &#34; &#x22;
no-break space &nbsp; &#160; &#xa0;
Note Entities are case sensitive thus &Eacute;
represents upper case E with an acute accent (É)
while &eacute; represents the corresponding
lower case letter (é). &EacutE; does not repre-
sent anything (&EacutE;). (The error just gets
printed out.)
Note Irrespective of the ISO-8859 encoding em-
ployed the entity or numeric reference to be
input remains the same. So, although in ISO-
8859-7 the euro symbol is represented as byte
A4, entering the code &#xA4; will generate a ¤
symbol not a euro symbol. The code to be input
is the entity or numeric character reference for
the character required.
Table A6.3.2
Printable ASCII and Greek characters
Using ISO-8859-7 encoding
Hex code for character MSD in row lsd in column
x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 xA xB xC xD xE xF
0x
1x
A
2x
sp
! # $ % & ( ) * + , - . / S
3x
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < > = ? C
4x
@
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O I
5x
P Q R S T U V
W
X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ I
6x
` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
7x
p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~
8x
9x
Ax
nb
sp
£ ¦ §
¨
© « ¬
shy
¯
Bx
° ± ² ³ ´ · » ½
Cx
Dx
Ex
Fx
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 49
A6.3.6 UTF encodings
ISO-8859 is fine when using one language at a time
but becomes clumsy and slow when languages are
mixed. UTF coding releases us from this restriction and
provides a mechanism for addressing the full range of
Unicode characters quickly. KompoZer allows coding in
either UTF-8, UTF-16 or UTF-32 formats which are
based on units of 8, 16 or 32 bits respectively. UTF-32
is not usually used for coding web pages.
UTF-8 uses 1 to 4 bytes to represent a character. It
uses 1 byte to represent characters in the ASCII set,
two bytes for the next 1920 characters (including the
Latin alphabet characters with diacritics, Greek,
Cyrillic, Coptic, Armenian, Hebrew, and Arabic charac-
ters) and three bytes for the rest of 65,000 characters
in the Basic Multilingual plane (BMP). Supplementary
characters use 4 bytes.
UTF-16 uses 2 bytes for any character in the BMP,
and 4 bytes for supplementary characters.
UTF-32 uses 4 bytes for all characters
KompoZer offers additional practical advantages
when UTF-8 encoding is used for pages with multiple
languages. Irrespective of the encoding in use in Nor-
mal or Preview mode KompoZer depicts all characters
correctly using the corresponding 'glyph'. In source
view encodings which require characters to be repre-
sented as character references show the character
reference. This reduces readability significantly. With
UTF encoding all characters can be represented as
glyphs so the problem is avoided.
A6.3.7 Symbols
Traditionally computers have relied on special fonts
like ‘Symbol’ or ‘Wingdings’ to produce symbols. This is
not necessary on web pages. Since such fonts do not
support Unicode any attempt to use them will yield
unreliable results which may vary from browser to
browser.
Fortunately Unicode supports a large range of sym-
bols which fulfills many needs.
Inputting special symbols
There are several ways of inserting symbols into a
page using KompoZer.
1 Via the Insert menu. Using Insert > Characters
and Symbols. Covers accented characters and a
number of other common symbols
2 Using Windows Character Map. Using the stand-
ard font in use find the symbol required, select
and copy it, then in KompoZer paste it as re-
quired. Recent versions of Character map allow
you to group characters by Unicode subrange
which makes it easier to find a particular symbol
3 If you use a particular symbol frequently it may
be easier to insert it by keystroke. Several char-
acters permit this and, where it can be done, the
keystroke is shown at the bottom right corner of
Character Map. The euro symbol, , for instance,
may be inserted using ALT+0128
4 AllChars [Ref21] is a useful utility that allows
any program to insert any Windows-1282 (see
below) character using a few easily discovered
keystrokes
5 In KompoZer Source view any character may be
inserted using the Numeric character reference.
In the bottom left corner of Character Map this
is given in hex format. Thus for euro you insert
&#x20AC;
Note The code is shown in Character map as
U+20AC This is the conventional way of repre-
senting Unicode characters i.e. by 'U+' followed
by the hexadecimal code point
6 In source view, entity references may be inserted
similarly. Many are easy to memorise e.g. &euro;
&gt; &lt;
The first four methods can be used in normal or
preview mode, the last two in source view.
Table A6.3-4
Some useful symbols
Symbol Key code Unicode
En dash alt+0150 U+2013
Em dash alt+0151 U+2014
ellipsis ... alt+0133 U+2026
Left single quote alt+0145 U+2018
Right single quote alt+0146 U+2019
Left double quote alt+0147 U+201C
Right double quote alt+0148 U+201D
Euro alt+0128 U+20AC
Pound £ alt+0163 U+00A3
Degree sign ° alt+0176 U+00B0
Multiply sign × alt+0215 U+00D7;
Divide sign ÷ alt+0247 U+00F7;
The keen-eyed may observe that the key codes are
neither the character codes nor the Unicode code
points for the character required. In fact they are the
(decimal) character codes derived from Windows-1252
encoding. KompoZer will convert these to whatever
code is appropriate depending on the encoding selected
and the character involved. (So the key code never
appears in the source.) Incidentally Windows-1252 [Ref
13] encoding is a possible alternative to ISO-8859-1
suitable for western languages. It increases the
number of available character codes to 218 characters
by re-allocating some of the codes in the range 80 to 9F
which are normally unused.
Alan Wood's website [Ref 2] is a useful resource
listing entities (where defined) and Numeric character
references for a large number of characters from the
Monotype Typography Symbol font (as on Windows XP)
including Greek, Mathematical and Punctuation [Ref 6]
and also the Microsoft Wingdings font [Ref 7]. (For
Windings in several cases there is no Unicode equiva-
lent.)
A6.3.8 Unicode support
A6.3.8.1 Fonts
Although Unicode offers tremendous potential the
usual caveats apply when choosing fonts. See for in-
stance section 4.2.1.1 but, in this case, it is important
to check that all fonts in the list include the characters
required. No font covers the full range of Unicode, or
even a small single digit percentage of it. To check the
supported Unicode ranges of a font Microsoft supply an
extension [Ref 12] for Windows Explorer. With it in-
stalled, right-click any TrueType (TTF) font file in Win-
dows Explorer and select the Properties tab. Particular
characters can be searched for using Character map.
Checking for support is more than usually difficult
if unusual characters are required. Compatible fonts
must be installed on any visitor's computer and, where
in a style sheet the font-family is specified as a priori-
tised list of font family names (as it should be), ideally
all fonts in the list should be checked.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 50
Note A font list lists fonts the first of which will
be used if available. It does not check that the
character required is supported by the font. So
even if support is provided by a font lower in the
list that may not be accessed.
Check the rendering of a page on as many different
browsers as possible. Mozilla browsers do authors only
a partial service since, if a character is encountered
which is not included in the font(s) listed they will make
an attempt to find the character on other fonts in-
stalled on the machine. Authors should however check
all pages using MSIE 6 which does not offer this
capability. (MSIE7 will substitute for a few characters.)
Visitors may finish up looking at square boxes instead
of the character required.
Alan Wood offers several pages which are extremely
useful in this respect. “Using special characters from
Windows Glyph List 4 (WGL4) in HTML” [Ref 3] lists
characters in the WGL4 set and which are likely to be
widely available. “Unicode fonts for Windows comput-
ers” [Ref 4] lists which fonts carry specific ranges of
Unicode characters and, more interestingly, shows
distribution of the fonts so that authors may check
likely availability to visitors. Those wishing to use a
rarer character may check which fonts include them at
Unicode character ranges and the Unicode fonts that
support them [Ref 5].
A6.3.8.2 Examples
While preparing this page, for instance, Table A6.3-
1 displayed correctly in Firefox and KompoZer but in
MSIE the arrows originally appeared as squares. The
issue is reproduced in the box.
Example
Character U+21D1 not included any font used from
the list specified (Tahoma, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif).
The arrow appears as a square when using MSIE = 7
Same demonstration but set up spanning the arrow
with font-family: ‘Lucida Sans Unicode’ .
The arrows use comparatively rare characters that
do not appear in the Tahoma font used but, on the
writer's machine at least, the Gecko engine was able to
retrieve them, possibly from Lucida Sans Unicode.
The result is that visitors using MSIE see boxes
instead of arrows but those using Firefox or Opera may
see the arrows if Lucida Sans Unicode or some other
font with the characters is installed on their machine.
A work-around this issue is possible, as also shown
in the box. The list specifying the font is modified so
that the first in the list becomes 'Lucida Sans Unicode'.
If this is available it will be used, otherwise the choice
passes down the list. Alan Wood shows that this font is
supplied with Windows XP and Windows 2000 which
cover 90% of installations (mid 2007).
This is a moderately, but not very, robust solution.
Had the availability of the arrows been critical to un-
derstanding the table it would have been necessary to
change the design.
While the arrows may be considered rare and unu-
sual characters even characters covered by some ISO-
8859 options may not be reliable. In viewing Table
A6.3-2, depending on the browser in use and fonts
installed there are two characters, Drachma sign (Code
A5) and Greek ypogegrammeni (Code AA), which may
not display correctly. In cases like these checking the
WGL4 list may provide a warning because neither of
the characters is listed.
A6.4 Special characters
A6.4.1 Entities or numeric character references
A6.4.1.1 Output the following characters
The way in which characters are coded in the
source for the page may be altered in KompoZer using
Tools > Preferences > Advanced. In the Special Charac-
ters area there are four options under ‘Output the
following characters as entities’
Only & < > and non-breakable whitespace
The above and Latin-1 letters
HTML 4 special characters
Use &#...; notation for all non-ASCII characters
The options refer to characters typed onto the page
which will be readable by a visitor to a site. Irrespective
of the option set the visual appearance on screen will
remain the same.
First option
Only & < > and non-breakable whitespace’
Note In normal practice the character referred to
as non-breakable whitespace.’ is called ‘no-
break space.’ (entity &nbsp;).
The section on 'Preferences' recommends this as the
preferred option.
This is the minimal setting. The characters listed
must always be encoded whatever option is selected.
With this selection the encoding will be as entities.
Since the character < occurs in HTML code to mark the
start of an element, if it is included in the page text the
browser would expect to to start a new element and the
page would become corrupted. It must always be en-
coded. The > character marks the end of an element
and should be safe to use but W3C recommend that it
also be encoded since it may confuse older browsers
See section 5.3.2 of the HTML Specification [Ref 16]. If
you wish to override this check the box . ‘Don’t encode
> outside of attribute values’.
Since entities and numeric character references
start with an ampersand (&) a similar problem occurs
with this character.
Outputing the no-break space as an entity is con-
venient since it would otherwise look like a normal
space in a listing.
With this option the output will be an entity where
specified, else for encodable characters, it will be the
code for the character else the character will be output
as a decimal numeric character code.
Before publishing a page always select this option
since it will result in the smallest file size.
Second option
The option ‘The above and Latin-1 letters’ Strictly
should read 'The above and Latin-1 characters except
ASCII characters'. That refers to characters in the
Latin-1 set with codes in the range A0 to FF.
The output code for ASCII characters is the charac-
ter code, for the remaining Latin-1 characters is the
entity, else is a decimal numeric character reference.
Third option
The option HTML 4 special characters’ refers to
all characters for which The HTML 4 specification [Ref
16] (Section 24) provides an entity reference.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 51
The output code for ASCII characters is the charac-
ter code, for all characters for which an entity exists is
the entity else it is a decimal numeric character refer-
ence.
Final option
The final option should output decimal numeric
character reference for all non-ASCII characters but
has a bug so that it uses a mixture of character codes
(for ASCII characters) and entities or numeric referenc-
es for others.
Note The output will always produce valid and
operating code for the corresponding character
so files run correctly. With KompoZer 0.7.10, for
all options, there are a few detailed non-compli-
ances with the above description.
The options provided may be useful during develop-
ment if you work in source code and may make it easier
for you to read. They may also be required if transfer-
ring source code to some other applications. If, for
instance, your file was encoded as UTF-8 and you
wanted to transfer the content to an application which
could accept only text the fourth option would be useful.
This ensures that only ASCII characters appear in
the file. Unfortunately this is one option that does not
work in KompoZer 0.7.10
Note. In source view you may enter characters
using any of these systems irrespective of the
option selected. After leaving and re-entering
source view, the display will conform to the
option selected and not to the form in which it
was entered.
In Normal and Preview mode KompoZer will attempt
to render all characters correctly, irrespective of the
option selected, subject to the limitations described
under ‘Unicode support’ above.
If you need an ascii only file an alternative way to
obtain one is via the File > Save and change Character
Encoding menu item. Check the ‘Export to text’ box
and save the file as text. The original file remains
intact. Again with UTF encoding this appears to be
faulty but if the encoding is temporally switched to
ISO-8859-1 it works.
A6.4.1.2 Don't encode > outside of attribute values
This is explained under the first option above.
The section on ‘Preferences’ suggests that this be
left in the default, cleared, state but this is optional.
A6.4.2 Encoding in attribute values
One final option in Tools > Preferences > Advanced
provides the option ‘Don’t encode special characters in
Attribute values’. That is not a very precise definition of
what happens because the whole page must be encod-
ed in the same way. What it changes is the way in
which character references are used in attribute values.
When you check the box, special characters appear-
ing in the value of any attribute will be left untouched
and not encoded as entities or numerical character
references.
A6.4.2.1 Don't encode special chrs in attribute values
An example will serve to illustrate.
The table element has an attribute 'summary' and
might appear as:
<table summary="Resumé of results">
The attribute is ‘summary’ and the value is ‘Resumé
of results’. If the characters were encoded as entities
the source would read
<table summary=“Resum&eacute; of results”>
Even worse if the characters were encoded as nu-
meric character references the source would read
<table summary=“Resum&#233; of results”>
Any readout on the screen, whether through a
properties inspector or at the bottom of the browser
window, will be normal but those doing lot of work in
source view might prefer not to encode in this situation.
You are recommended to check the box ‘Don't
encode special characters in attribute values’ un-
less you have good reason to do otherwise.
Where the attribute value is a URL a different
encoding method is covered in the following section.
A6.5 URL encoding
A6.5.1 Percentage encoding
Special considerations apply to characters in a URL.
URLs can occur as the value of an attribute to many
elements the most common being the ‘href’.
Any Latin 1 character may occur in a URL but only
those shown against a green background in Table
A6.5-1 may be used freely. This set includes alphabet-
ics, hyphen and underscore. A number of other charac-
ters which may have specific meanings are reserved.
This includes the majority of the remaining ASCII
characters. Such characters may be used to separate
one part of the structure from an other e.g the colon
separates the protocol from the domain. These charac-
ters, from current specifications, are shown against an
orange background. Whenever such a character is
used other than for the specific reserved purpose it
must be encoded to avoid confusion. Use of the remain-
ing characters depends on specifics of the URL or part
of the URL involved.
When encoding is required in a URL a new method
referred to as ‘percentage encoding’ is used. Put simply,
percent encoded characters consist of a percentage
sign followed by two characters representing the hexa-
decimal position of the character in the Latin 1 set.
Thus %20 represents a space.
x0 x1 x2 x3 x4 x5 x6 x7 x8 x9 xA xB xC xD xE xF
0x
1x
2x
sp
! # $ % & ( ) * + , - . /
L
3x
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
4x
@
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O I
A
5x
P Q R S T U V
W
X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ I
6x
` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
T
7x
p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~
8x
I
9x
Ax
nb
sp
! ¢ £ ¤ ¥ ¦ § ¨ © ª « ¬
shy
® ¯
N
Bx
° ± ² ³ ´ µ · ¸ ¹ º » ¼ ½ ¾ ¿
Cx
À Á Â Ã Ä Å Æ Ç È É Ê Ë Ì Í Î Ï
1
Dx
Ð Ñ Ò Ó Ô Õ Ö × Ø Ù Ú Û Ü Ý Þ ß
Ex
à á â ã ä å æ ç è é ê ë ì í î ï
Fx
ð ñ ò ó ô õ ö ÷ ø ù ú û ü ý þ ÿ
Table A6.5.1
Characters permissible in a URL
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 52
Full details of URL encoding are covered in RFC
3986 [Ref 14], Wikipedia [Ref 11] provides a simpler
explanation.
Authors often note that the names of saved files
appear with spaces replaced by %20. As explained this
is quite safe and indeed some operating systems pro-
hibit unencoded spaces in file names. It is always
preferable to avoid spaces when naming files. Use the
underscore as an alternative.
It is actually possible to use percentage encoding for
any character in the Latin 1 set.
When KompoZer percent encodes it errs on the
cautious side, that is, it may encode when this is not
strictly necessary. This occurs for two reasons.
KompoZer often cannot know the ultimate pur-
pose of the URL so cannot necessarily know
whether or not it is safe not to encode.
The specifications of what may, may not or op-
tionally may be encoded have varied from time to
time and many old systems which may not com-
ply to the latest specifications are still deployed.
Since it is permissible to percent encode any char-
acter this should not matter. Unfortunately it some-
times does. Again systems may not comply with the
current specifications.
Eric Meyer has provided a URL Decoder Encoder in
his toolbox [ref 20] which allows you to see the results
of encoding.
A6.5.2 Don't encode special chars in attribute values
The check box ‘Don't encode special characters in
attribute values’ controls whether or not KompoZer
percent encodes special characters in URLs.
As an example KompoZer encodes the pipe charac-
ter ‘|’ because an earlier specification required this.
But some systems will not decode this correctly and
malfunction. On the Nvu forum it was reported that
<img src="/cgi-
sys/Count.cgi?df=bassman7.dat|display
Counter|ft=1|md=|frgb=100;139;216|dd=E&reload=N">
was being encoded as
<img src="/cgi-
sys/Count.cgi?df=bassman7.dat%7Cdisplay=Counter%7Cft
=1%7Cmd=6%7Cfrgb=100;139;216%7Cdd =E&amp;reload=N">
and that this was not being correctly recognised.
To solve this problem check the box ‘Don’t encode
special characters in attribute values’.
KompoZer is not capable of selectively encoding
characters in one URL and not in another. Nevertheless
this limitation does not appear to be a problem to
authors.
A6.6 References
Jukka Korpela
[1] Characters and Encodings http://www.cs.tut.fi/%7Ejkorpela/chars/covers almost every aspect of the
subject.
Alan Wood
[2] Excellent general resource http://www.alanwood.net/unicode/index.html offers several pages includ-
ing Unicode test pages, setting up of browsers, Fonts with Unicode support, Operating systems. Also
specific pages on
[3] Using special characters from Windows Glyph List 4 (WGL4) in HTML
http://www.alanwood.net/demos/wgl4.html
[4] Unicode fonts for Windows computers http://www.alanwood.net/unicode/fonts.html
[5] Unicode character ranges and the Unicode fonts that support them.
http://www.alanwood.net/unicode/fontsbyrange.html
[6] Greek, Mathematical and Punctuation http://www.alanwood.net/demos/symbol.html
[7] Microsoft Wingdings font http://www.alanwood.net/demos/wingdings.html
Wikipedia has good articles on
[8] ASCII http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII
[9] ISO 8859-1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1 also other parts
[10] Mapping of Unicode characters to Unicode planes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapping_of_Unicode_characters
[11] URL encoding http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding
Microsoft has
[12] Extension for the properties tab of Windows Explorer to check Unicode support.
http://www.microsoft.com/typography/property/property.htm
13] Windows 1252 http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/reference/sbcs/1252.mspx character listing
Standards and Specifications
[14] RFC 3986 Uniform Resource Identifier Generic Syntax http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt
[15] CSS 2.1 specification http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/
[16] HTML 4.01 specification http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/cover.html
[17] Unicode site http://www.unicode.org
Other resources
[18] Penn State University http://tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/international/web/unicode.html also has an
excellent page on 'Getting Started: Unicode' which covers OS, Browsers, fonts etc
[19] W3C http://www.w3.org/International/tutorials/tutorial-char-enc/en/all.html offer a somewhat
more technical tutorial dealing mainly with encoding and covering material that KompoZer hides from
the author
[20] Eric Meyer http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/ has a toolbox which includes a URL Decoder Encoder.
[21] AllChars http://allchars.zwolnet.com/ has a freeware utility that allows you to enter any Windows
1282 character using a few keystrokes
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 53
A7.1 Preliminary
A7.1.1 Introduction
When web pages are printed the re-
sults are sometimes unsatisfactory. Us-
ing CSS, authors can often improve this
significantly though browser support for
some print rules is still somewhat limited.
Although web pages are most commonly viewed on
screen site visitors sometimes wish to print them to
hard copy. This is particularly so with pages carrying
information about an order or order confirmation,
though it could occur for almost any page.
One approach is to offer a special ‘printer friendly’
version of a page. This is accessed via a link on the
page and can be formatted to produce a good printed
result. One penalty is that two versions of a page must
be maintained with concomitant risk that the content
of the two may differ; another is that the visitor may
miss the link and use the normal method of printing so
the effort is wasted.
Fortunately CSS styles provide an alternative ap-
proach. A special printer style sheet can be developed;
all pages on a site can be linked to it and no special
editing of individual pages is required. A page may then
be printed using menu instructions such as File > Print
in a browser.
Those unfamiliar with CSS should return to Section
4 of the User Guide and learn how to use Styles in
KompoZer before proceeding further.
A7.1.2 Printer style sheets
Printer stylesheets can be either internal or external
(linked) sheets. What is needed is some means of
identifying such sheets with the purpose for which they
are intended. This is done using one of two methods.
For complete style sheets specify the ‘media’
attribute for the link or style element.
For individual style rules or groups of rules use
the @media rule.
A7.1.2.1 Style sheets – media="print"
The normal form of a link to an external style sheet,
in the header of a file, is <link rel="stylesheet"
href="stylefile.css" type="text/css">.
The normal form for the opening tag for an internal
style sheet is <style type="text/css">
With KompoZer, when you open CaScadeS and
click a sheet, in the general tab the 'Media list' shows
'all'. This indicates that the styles in the file apply to all
media.
Normal style sheets can be changed to 'print' style
sheets very easily. Proceed as follows
1 Open CaScadeS
2 In the Sheets and rules window click on the
stylesheet. The general tab will be opened.
3 In the Media list box the word 'all' will appear.
Overtype it with the word 'print'.
4 Close the CaScadeS. (If the OK button is inac-
cessible click any stylesheet then any rule and
then click OK.)
If you now inspect the code it will have been
changed to:
For an external stylesheet <link media="print"
rel="stylesheet" href="stylefile.css"
type="text/css">
For an internal stylesheet <style media="print"
type="text/css">
Note. When using KompoZer, if you re-open
CaScadeS the entry in the 'Media list' box will
not have changed. This is a bug. To correct this
save the file and revert.
This shows that the sheet applies only to print
media. In the absence of a media attribute a sheet
applies to all media.
Note Although CaScadeS may show the media
list as 'all' and this is in fact a recognised media
type the stylesheet itself does not contain this
information. However it will default to applying
to all media types.
A7.1.2.2 Individual style rules – @media
Sheets that apply to all media may have individual
rules tagged to apply only to print media. To do this
rules must be enclosed in the @media rule.
For example the body could be styled to remove the
margin and background and specify the font size in
printer units
@media print {
body { margin: 0; background-image: none;
font-size: 12pt; }
}
This shows a single rule being changed but rules
may be grouped.
@media print {
p { font-size: 10pt; }
h1 { font-size: 14pt; }
h2 { font-size: 12pt; }
}
KompoZer does not offer any way of implementing
this method automatically so if you want to use the
@media rule you must edit the style sheet to add the
@media by hand. Once created CaScadeS can be used
to edit, add or delete rules.
A7.1.3 Media types
This appendix is about 'Print' type media. The CSS
specification includes the following types: Braille, Em-
bossed, Handheld, Print, Projection, Screen, Speech,
tty and TV. At present only Screen and, to a lesser
extent, print are widely supported.
An earlier version of the specification had an 'Aural'
type but this has been replaced by 'Speech'.
A7.2 Styles for printing
So what changes might you want to make to make
a page print better?
Appendix 7 - Making pages Printable
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 54
A7.2.1 Dimensions
The first thing to consider is probably whether the
dimensions and units of measurement in the style
sheet are appropriate for printing.
The CSS Specification provides specific methods for
specifying the characteristics of the printed page which
includes size and margin and allows different margins
for first, left- and right-hand side pages and even
allows classes to be applied to different parts of a
document to allow these to be changed. The method is
based on the @page rule. Unfortunately support for
this rule is almost non-existent with current browsers
so this guide recommends alternative, albeit not as
flexible, methods.
A7.2.1.1 Margins
Printed pages are usually presented with much
wider margins than pages viewed on screen. The body
element of a web page frequently has margins of only
about 10px. How wide this appears on a printed page
depends on the resolution of a printer and, with a high
resolution printer, may be little more than a gnats
whisker. For a printed page this should be quite satis-
factory as will be explained.
Many printed pages use generous margins of up to
3cm. The minimum margin should probably not be less
than 1.2 cm since some printers may require this.
Visitors needing to file printed pages and punch them
to do so may prefer a left margin of about 2cm.
All browsers apply some default margin to a printed
page and the main browsers allow this to be altered.
Any margin specified within a web page will be applied
in addition to the margin set in the browser. Web
authors should therefore not apply large margins to
pages for printing but leave it to the visitor to set the
browser. Where the standard style sheet applies a
margin of 10 or 15px this can probably be ignored but
where it is greater the print style sheet should set this
to zero.
(The competition between the two sets of margins
may well account for the fact that browsers avoid
supporting the @page rule.)
If the style of the page is to have a wide space on
each side with centralised content, it is quite possible
to specify the width, which should be in inches or
centimetres, and set left and right margins to auto.
A7.2.1.2 Fonts
After margins the most important thing to consider
is fonts. Although the CSS rules allow font size for
printed media to be specified in any of the normal ways
the unit almost universally used for print media is the
point and there appears to be no good reason to use
any other.
A possible print style sheet might look like
@media print {
p, h4, ul, ol, td, a { font-size: 12pt; }
h1 { font-size: 24pt; }
h2 { font-size: 18pt; }
h3 { font-size: 14pt; }
h5 { font-size: 10pt; }
}
Font colour also needs to be considered. Many
printers print in monochrome. Rather than hope that
any colours used will be interpreted suitably it is better
to take the bull by the horns and change color to black.
A7.2.1.3 Other dimensions
Where items are positioned, indented or given sizes
on a web page this is frequently expressed in pixels.
The specification does not include any rules for map-
ping these to paper dimensions, so those wanting to be
really fussy may wish to substitute inches or centime-
tres. In practice the effort is rarely justifiable as brows-
ers make reasonable assumptions. Dimensions
expressed as percentages work as normal.
A7.2.2 Selections
The second issue is exactly what should be printed
is there material on the page that does not need
printing?
The issues are twofold.
Links and menus on the page will be inactive
when printed. Internal links may usefully be
omitted but external links which are not explicit
may need to become so.
Printer ink and print time can be a precious
resource. Minimising use may be helpful to the
user.
A7.2.2.1 Menus
On a page like this, to print the navigation menu is
a waste of time. Items like this can be prevented from
printing by using the style rule display: none; available
on CSS editor Box tab. This rule can then be attached
to any item which is not to be printed by using a class
like 'noprint'. A rule to do this could be:
@media print {
.noprint { display: none; }
}
Simply tag any item not to be printed with the class
'noprint'. This will have no effect on screen since it is
defined only for print media. Being able to tag items
with several classes is convenient since adding the
noprint class has no effect on any other class attached
to an item.
The menu of this page is enclosed in its own division
so the treatment described is easy. Depending on the
structure of the document it may be helpful to enclose
several items in a div rather than tag each individually
to suppress printing.
A7.2.2.2 External links
Many authors don't show the URL of external links
on screen. This makes the page tidier and links still
work when clicked. When printed such links become
unrecognisable and useless. An alternative is to repeat
the URL after each link but to style it as display: none;
in the general style sheet and display: inline; in the
print style sheet. Just take care that it is surrounded
by spaces when printed, otherwise it will look ugly.
As an example here is how I coded the first reference
in section A7.4 below.
<p><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/"> CSS2
Specification </a>
<span class="extlink">http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/
</span> introduces media in section 7 and covers
paged media in section 13</p>
The words 'CSS2 Specification' form a clickable
link. The URL of the link is then repeated but enclosed
in a <span> which has the class 'extlink'.
The page is linked to two stylesheets. The sheet
applicable to all media is loaded first and includes the
rule
.extlink { display: none; }
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 55
The print stylesheet is loaded later and includes the
rule
.extlink { display: inline; text-decora-
tion: underline; }
Underlining the links makes them stand out and
you may like to consider printing them in blue.
The order of loading the sheets is important be-
cause, if the print stylesheet were loaded first and the
unspecific ('all') sheet loaded subsequently this would
override the print sheet. See section 7.3.1
A7.2.2.3 Images
Images are the raison d'être of some pages so must
be printed, in others they vary from major irritants to
incidental material which may be omitted to save time
and ink. The same approach can be used as for menus
or, if all images are to be suppressed, the img element
may be given the style display: none;
A7.2.2.4 Backgrounds
Some browsers will not print backgrounds at all.
Others offer options, but this cannot be relied on. This
applies both to background images and solid colour.
On a page like this, if the menu is not suppressed it is
likely to print unreliably. The background colour, if
printed, may bleed into the white text, particularly with
low quality paper, and become unreadable. In such
cases it is much better to set up a new set of styles for
the buttons using colour schemes which are workable.
A7.2.3 Page media
Having decided what to print and where to print it,
the next thing to consider is page breaks. This is a
concept completely alien to screen devices. Of course
the page author cannot know the size of the sheet that
the page will be printed on, so manual page breaks are
out of the question and we must resort to using auto-
matic page breaks. Anyone who has used a word
processor or desk top publisher will know that this is a
'dodgy' process. No less with web pages, but the CSS
Specification does provide some assistance.
CaScadeS offers a tab for developing style sheets for
'aural' media (this type is now deprecated) but not print
media. As a result what follows can be implemented
only by editing the code by hand.
The CSS2.1 Specification covers paged media in
section 13. As already stated, the @page method is
largely unsupported as yet, but two properties which
may improve printed layout are page-break-before and
page-break after. These may be set to a value of
'always, 'avoid' or 'auto'.
Typically authors may force a page break before a
major heading, for instance:
h1 {page-break-before: always}
Similarly other headings can be kept with their
associated content by:
h3 {page-break-after: avoid}
The 'page-break-after' property is less well support-
ed, at least with the value 'avoid'.
The specification also includes the property page-
break-inside. This is intended to keep together associ-
ated content such as a table or div. Potentially this is
an extremely useful property and overcomes one of the
most annoying and spoiling features of printed pages
but as of 2007 appears to be unsupported.
To keep a block item together use a class like:
.keeptogether {page-break-inside: avoid}
A7.3 Getting results
A7.3.1 The right order
Having set up printer style sheets as described, all
should be well but there are a few precautions to take.
Normally there will be two sets of styles, one for
printed media, one for all media. If the two sets were for
printed media and screen media no ambiguity could
result but there are good reasons to avoid this approach:
Visitors using other media would be completely
disenfranchised.
Both style sheets would have to be comprehen-
sive, this would lead to more development and
more maintenance.
Instead of this, it is normal to use a style sheet
covering all media and a separate one for print media
which includes only a few styles – those few that need
to be different for print.
The specifications that control the cascading order
for styles dictate that the later encountered style rules
override those encountered earlier. Thus, if the rules
for print media are read first, followed by those for all
media, the latter will prevail and the print media rules
will be ignored. It is therefore important that the
link to the print style sheet should appear after
that to the normal style sheet.
CaScadeS enters style sheets in the head section in
the same order as shown in the 'Sheets and rules'
window.
To alter the order of linked, or internal, style sheets:
Open CaScadeS
In the sheets and rules window click a style sheet
Click the 'Up' or 'Down' button to change its
place in the listing.
A7.3.2 Inline styles
As a general rule, styles for print media cannot be
applied using inline styles. Possible exceptions are the
page-break properties. These apply only to paged me-
dia and are therefore meaningless and will be ignored
by screen and most other devices, however both print
and projection are paged media so may require differ-
ent breaks.
The cascading rules dictate that inline styles have
precedence over all others. Authors will probably use
inline styles sparingly and, other than the above,
should certainly avoid specifying any styles which do
not apply to all media. Inline style declarations will
override any print styles so any which could give
problems must be avoided.
A7.3.3 Images, Floats and page breaks
Here are a few of the issues that you might meet
when checking how your pages print. Some are un-
doubtedly due to the poor support for print media that
browsers manage to achieve in late 2007 others may
more properly be laid at the door of an inadequate
definition in the CSS specification of what should hap-
pen.
The comments here are more empirical than theo-
retical and are based on the most recent versions of the
main Browsers – Internet Explorer, Firefox and Opera.
A7.3.3.1 Page breaks
Page breaks will usually take place in the position
determined by the natural flow of the material encoun-
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 56
tered though this may be modified using page-break-
before. This is usually satisfactory but may not be
optimal for lists and material in table cells however
page-break-inside is unsupported there is little you
can do about it.
A7.3.3.2 Images
Images are the one element that require the state-
ment just made to be modified a little. Images are not
normally broken so, when they will not fit in the space
remaining on a page, a page break will be thrown and
the image will appear on the following page. This is
entirely natural and what would be expected.
A7.3.3.3 Float
Where elements are floated a number of problems
can occur. A simple way to overcome these is to avoid
floating anything on a print style sheet. This is quite
easy to achieve if all floats are done using a class. For
instance, to float something right you might set up a
rule in the general style sheet
.floatr { float: right; margin-left: 4px;
}
while in the print style sheet you might have
.floatr { float: none; }
If you find this over restrictive you need to look at
the problem areas. These are mainly images and tables.
Images contained in block elements (e.g. para-
graphs or divisions) which are floated will behave, as
far as page breaks are concerned, in the same way as
if the blocks (and images) were not floated.
Images placed directly in the body or in non floated
block elements and then floated are liable to be split
across a page boundary or to be truncated depending
on the browser. The simple solution to this is to float
the block in which the image is located if necessary
creating one specifically to hold it.
Floated tables appear prone to a variety of prob-
lems including locking up browsers. Avoid if at all
possible.
Long columns, as used for instance in some layout
schemes, are to be avoided if they are likely to overflow
from one page to the next.
As usual the advice is avoid if possible otherwise
check, check and check again.
A7.3.4 Browsers
Pages and style sheets designed as suggested will
be rendered satisfactorily, though not perfectly, on
most browsers. At the time of writing (late 2007) all of
the major browsers have difficulty with some aspect of
print styles. Authors should not hope to be really
prescriptive about how the final output appears. Web
Devout [Ref 2]has a useful page detailing Web browser
CSS support. Coverage will undoubtedly improve with
time.
A7.3.5 Development aid
Readers will know that KompoZer masquerades as
a passable browser. This can be pressed into use when
developing print style sheets. For testing purposes,
once the style sheets have been linked in the correct
order it is simple to relink the print style sheet as an
'all' style sheet (reversing the process described in
A7.1.2.1). After closing and reloading the file the Nor-
mal view or Preview mode then become print view
modes. The style sheet can then be refined while
immediately seeing the result. Don't forget to change
back to 'print' before finalising!
A7.4 References
[1] CSS2 Specification http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/ introduces media in section 7 and covers paged
media in section 13
[2] Web Devout http://www.webdevout.net/browser-support-css has a useful page detailing CSS support
for several modern browsers.
[3] WestCiv http://www.westciv.com/style_master/academy/browser_support/index.html has summary
information about a wide range including older browsers .
A number of sites cover various aspects of printing though none are at all comprehensive.
[4] A List Apart http://www.alistapart.com/articles/alaprintstyles has an excellent article by Eric Meyer on
choosing styles for printing. Probably the best available.
[5] About http://webdesign.about.com/cs/css/a/aa042103a.htm gives a general introduction by Jennifer
Kyrnyn to considerations for printed pages.
[6] Opera offers some useful general information.
http://dev.opera.com/articles/view/making-small-devices-look-great/
[7] WestCiv offers more specific information about @page and page properties.
http://www.westciv.com/style_master/academy/css_tutorial/advanced/printing.html
[8] Rich in style has a fairly informative page about paged media.
http://www.richinstyle.com/guides/fontface2.html This will become more useful when @page is bet-
ter supported.
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 57
Index
@
@media.................................. 53
A
Absolute position.............. 17, 18
Alan Wood.............................. 49
Align................. 9, 12, 13, 15, 31
AllChars (utility)...................... 49
Alternate text.......................... 12
Anchor element...................... 15
ASCII...................................... 47
ascii only file........................... 51
Author..................................... 36
B
Background
body................................... 19
colours................... 14, 19, 25
images................... 14, 19, 25
table................................... 14
Basic Multilingual plane.......... 49
Block........................................ 9
outline................................... 9
BMP....................................... 49
Body................................... 9, 19
background........................ 19
centring.............................. 19
Bookmark............................... 15
Border
glue to................................ 18
Borders................................... 18
body................................... 19
button................................. 19
image................................. 12
table................................... 13
using CSS.......................... 25
Box (CSS box model)............. 25
Break below image................. 31
Bring forward.......................... 18
Browser testing...................... 39
Bullets.................................... 10
C
CaScadeS.............................. 23
Cascading stylesheets........... 22
Cazenave, Fabien.................. 58
Cells
background........................ 13
merge/split.......................... 13
normal/header.............. 13, 15
size..................................... 14
spacing............................... 14
Centring
body................................... 19
Page................................... 19
table................................... 15
Character Encoding............... 48
Character Map................. 11, 49
Character references............. 48
Character set.................... 36, 47
Charset................................... 48
Classes............................ 22, 26
applying.............................. 26
applying to div.................... 29
removing............................ 27
Colour
Hex and RGB values......... 25
names................................ 25
specifying........................... 25
Comments.............................. 31
Create a page.......................... 8
CSS........................................ 22
D
Decimal code (character)....... 11
Declaration (style).................. 23
Defaults.................................. 35
Deprecated............................. 41
Dictionaries............................ 11
Disruptive Innovations.............. 5
Div (Division).................... 17, 29
Doctype.............................. 7, 42
Don't encode ......................... 36
Drag and drop.................... 8, 37
Drag handle............................ 12
DTD........................ see Doctype
E
Edit Mode Toolbar.................... 7
Editing...................................... 8
Element.................................... 8
Email address........................ 15
Encoding characters.............. 47
Entities............................. 11, 48
Escaping to page body........... 21
Export stylesheet.................... 27
Extension
for Windows explorer......... 52
Extensions.............................. 44
Extensions (application)......... 44
Extensions (file) 9, 11, 12, 22,
32, 41, 43, 44
External style.......................... 22
F
Filenames................................. 8
extension.............................. 9
Firewall............................. 34, 40
Float................................. 26, 55
Fonts
building sets....................... 24
relative and absolute size. . 25
size..................................... 24
Format Toolbar................... 7, 37
Formatting
images................................ 12
lists..................................... 10
tables.................................. 13
text....................................... 9
Forms..................................... 17
Forum....................................... 6
Frames................................... 16
G
Glazman, Daniel....................... 5
Glossary................................. 41
Gluing..................................... 18
H
Head......................................... 8
Height..................................... 25
Horizontal line........................ 31
HSB........................................ 25
HTML............................. 7, 8, 42
Tags..................................... 8
HTML Tags view.................... 20
HyperText Markup Language. . 8
I
ID (Unique identifier).............. 28
Image
align.................................... 12
border................................. 12
dimensions......................... 12
formats............................... 12
inserting.............................. 12
positioning.......................... 12
resize.................................. 12
Images................................... 12
Importing text......................... 10
Indenting................................ 10
Inheritance....................... 19, 29
Inline style.............................. 22
Inserts.................................... 31
Installing................................. 44
Internal style........................... 22
ISO-8859................................ 47
J
JavaScript.............................. 30
K
Kazé..... See: Cazenave, Fabien
L
Latin 1 characters................... 47
Layers.................................... 17
classes............................... 18
Linked stylesheets.................. 22
Linking
images................................ 16
to anchors.......................... 15
to files................................. 15
Links....................................... 15
colours.......................... 16, 28
pseudo-classes.................. 28
relative................................ 16
to other files........................ 16
Lists........................................ 10
nesting................................ 10
M
Made with KompoZer............. 31
Margin.............................. 25, 54
KompoZer User Guide 17 December 2007 Based on version 0.7.10 58
Markup Cleaner..................... 39
Markup Language.................... 7
Media types............................ 53
Menu bar.................................. 7
Merge cells............................. 13
Multiple IE.............................. 39
N
New page settings................. 36
Non-breaking space......... 10, 41
Numeric character references 48
Nvu........................................... 5
O
OpenOffice.org....................... 10
Options........... See: Preferences
P
Padding.................................. 25
Page
centring.............................. 19
Page breaks........................... 55
Page views............................. 20
Percentage encoding............. 51
PHP.................................. 30, 31
Positioning text......................... 9
Preferences............................ 35
defaults.............................. 35
Print.......................................... 9
Printer style sheets................ 53
Profiles................................... 44
Pseudo-classes...................... 28
Publishing.............................. 39
Q
Quotes................................... 11
R
References................. 42, 52, 56
Return in paragraph .............. 36
RGB....................................... 25
Rule (style)............................. 23
Rulers....................................... 7
S
Saving files............................... 8
Scripts.................................... 30
Selecting items................... 9, 21
Selector (style)................. 23, 28
Send back.............................. 18
Shortcuts................................ 38
Site Manager.......................... 34
Smart quotes.......................... 11
Snapping................................ 18
Source view........................... 20
Special characters..... 11, 49, 50
Specification........................... 42
Spelling.................................. 11
Split cells................................ 13
Start a page............................. 8
Status Bar.......................... 7, 21
Strict DTD.............................. 42
Style
creating.............................. 23
inheritance......................... 29
nomenclature..................... 23
Stylesheets............................ 22
creating.............................. 27
exporting............................ 27
linking................................. 27
saving................................. 28
Symbols................................. 49
T
Table
size..................................... 13
Table of contents................... 19
Tables.................................... 12
Background images........... 14
border................................. 14
Caption............................... 15
Cell sizes............................ 14
Cellspacing........................ 14
centring.............................. 15
Header cells....................... 13
Headings............................ 15
Precisely...................... 13, 14
Quickly......................... 13, 14
Summary............................ 15
Table Properties................. 14
text alignment..................... 15
Templates.............................. 32
Title.......................................... 8
Toc......... See: Table of contents
Toolbars............................. 7, 37
customising........................ 37
Tooltip.................................... 12
Transitional DTD.................... 42
U
UCS....................................... 47
Unicode............................ 11, 48
Universal Character Set......... 47
Updating KompoZer............... 44
Uploading............................... 40
URL encoding........................ 51
Use CSS styles instead of .... 36
UTF encodings....................... 49
V
Validating............................... 39
Validator................................. 42
Viewing modes......................... 7
Views..................................... 20
W
W3C....................................... 41
specifications..................... 42
Width...................................... 25
Windows Glyph List............... 50
Windows installer................... 44
Windows-1252 encoding........ 49
Wingdings.............................. 49
Writing direction..................... 36
X
XHTML................................... 42
Z
z-index................................... 18
Zoom...................................... 12
Postscript
This guide started as notes for my personal use. I revealed its existence to the Nvu forums and after receiving
favourable and encouraging remarks decided to press on.
I express my thanks to those, including several from the Nvu and WysiFree forums, who have made a
number of useful suggestions which I have incorporated wherever possible. Particular thanks however go to
Gérard Talbot http://www.gtalbot.org/ who's knowledge of the web, html and CSS greatly exceeds mine and
who has offered a number of corrections and made many suggestions which I believe have significantly improved
the result. My thanks also go to Jukka "Yucca" Korpela http://www.cs.tut.fi/%7Ejkorpela/ who checked and
provided several corrections to the appendix on Encoding. Mistakes and omissions, of course, remain mine.
Gérard must also be thanked for undertaking the translation into French as must Tsutomu Ohmori for
translating into Japanese.
Thanks are also due to Daniel Glazman at Disruptive Innovations http://www.disruptive-innovations.com/
who developed Nvu from the earlier Netscape Composer and to Fabien Cazenave (Kazé)
http://fabiwan.kenobi.free.fr/who developed it into KompoZer.
6

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