- absolute URL
- The full Internet address of a page or other World Wide Web resource. The
absolute URL includes a protocol, such as "http," network location, and optional
path and file name. For example, http://example.microsoft.com/ is an absolute URL. See
also URL.
- accessibility
- The quality of a system incorporating hardware or software that makes it
usable by people with one or more physical disabilities, such as restricted mobility,
blindness, or deafness.
- Active Data Objects
- (ADO) Components that enable client applications to access and manipulate
data in a file- or server-based database through a provider.
- active hyperlink
- A hyperlink that is currently selected in a Web browser. Some Web
browsers indicate the active hyperlink by changing its color.
- active page, active web
- See current page, current web.
- Active Server Page
- (ASP) A document that contains embedded server-side scripting.
ASP-compatible Web servers can execute these scripts. On the client side, an ASP is a
standard HTML document that can be viewed on any platform using any Web browser.
- ActiveX
- A set of technologies that enables software components to interact with
one another in a networked environment, regardless of the language in which the components
were created. ActiveX is used primarily to develop interactive content for the World Wide
Web, although it can be used in desktop applications and other programs. See also ActiveX
controls.
- ActiveX controls
- Reusable software components that incorporate ActiveX technology. ActiveX
controls can be embedded in Web pages to produce animation and other multimedia effects,
interactive objects, and sophisticated applications. They can be written in a variety of
programming languages, including C, C++, and Visual Basic.
- anchor
- See bookmark.
- animated GIF
- A file containing a series of GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) graphics
that are displayed in rapid sequence in a Web browser, giving the appearance of a moving
picture. See also GIF.
- anonymous FTP
- The ability to access a remote computer system on which one does not have
an account, via the Internet's File Transfer Protocol (FTP). Users have restricted access
rights with anonymous FTP and usually can only list, view, or copy files to or from a
public directory on the remote system. Many FTP sites do not permit anonymous FTP access
in order to maintain security. See also FTP.
- applet
- See Java applet.
- article
- A message or posting in a discussion group or an Internet newsgroup. An
article can be a response to a previous article.
- ASCII
- (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) A coding scheme
using 7 or 8 bits that assigns numeric values to up to 256 characters, including letters,
numerals, punctuation marks, control characters, and other symbols. ASCII was developed in
1968 to standardize data transmission among disparate hardware and software systems and is
built into all personal computers.
- ASP
- (Active Server Page) A document that contains embedded server-side
scripting. ASP-compatible Web servers can execute these scripts. On the client side, an
ASP is a standard HTML document that can be viewed on any platform using any Web browser.
- aspect ratio
- In computer displays and graphics, the ratio of the width of a picture or
picture area to its height. For example, an aspect ratio of 2:1 indicates that the picture
is twice as wide as it is high. The aspect ratio is an important factor in maintaining
correct proportions when a picture is incorporated into another document such as a Web
page.
- authentication
- In a multiuser or network environment, the process by which the system
validates a user's logon information. A user's name and password are compared against an
authorized list, and, if the system detects a match, access is granted to the extent
specified in the permission list for that user.
- authentication database
- A database on a server that matches user names to passwords.
- Auto Thumbnail
- A tool that creates a thumbnail of a picture or photograph and a
hyperlink to the original picture. The Pictures toolbar in Page view
contains the Auto Thumbnail command. See also thumbnail.
- background sound
- A sound clip associated with a Web page. When the page is displayed in a
Web browser, the sound is played either continuously or the number of times that the page
specifies.
- banner
- See page banner.
- Banner Ad Manager
- A component in FrontPage that shows each of a series of designated
graphics for a specified number of seconds, then transitions to the next graphic using any
of several transition effects. Banner ads usually contain hyperlinks to an advertiser's
Web site.
- base location, base URL
- A URL that you can assign to a page to convert all relative URLs on that
page to absolute URLs. A base URL should end with a document name part, such as
http://example.microsoft.com/sample.htm or a trailing slash, such as
http://example.microsoft.com/subdir/. See also absolute URL.
- bevel
- A three-dimensional edge effect applied to the border of a graphic. The Pictures
toolbar in Page view contains the Bevel command.
- BMP
- (bitmap) The standard graphics file format on Windows-compatible
computers. Bitmap graphics support 24-bit color and can be saved for Windows or OS/2
systems. FrontPage can import BMP files.
- bookmark
- A named location on a Web page that can be the target of a hyperlink. A
bookmark can be applied to a string of characters or exist on a page separately from any
text. Bookmarks allow authors to link to a specific section of a target page. In a URL, a
bookmark is preceded by a the pound sign (#). Also called anchor.
- broken hyperlink
- In FrontPage, a hyperlink that points to an incorrect URL or a missing
page or file.
- browser
- See Web browser.
- browser-safe palette
- A color table containing only 216 out of a possible 256 colors, used to
precisely match the colors of graphics and pictures in cross-platform Web browsers. The
remaining 40 colors vary on IBM-compatible and Macintosh computers and are therefore
omitted.
- Cascading Style Sheet
- (CSS) An HTML specification developed by the World Wide Web Consortium
that allows authors of Web pages to attach style sheets to HTML documents. Style sheets
can include typographical information on how the page should appear, such as the font of
the text in the page. CSS also directs the way in which the style sheets of the HTML
document and the user's style will blend.
- category
- In FrontPage, a classification for labeling and grouping Web pages and
files by common criteria such as page contents, file types, or similar distinction.
- cell padding
- The space between the contents and inside edges of a table cell.
- cell spacing
- The amount of space between cells in a table. Cell spacing is the
thickness, in pixels, of the walls surrounding each cell.
- CGI
- (Common Gateway Interface) A standard method of extending Web server
functionality by executing programs or scripts on a Web server in response to Web browser
requests. A common use of CGI is in form processing, where the Web browser sends form data
to a CGI script on the server, the script integrates the data with a database, and sends
back the results as a Web page. Use of CGI can make a Web page much more dynamic and add
interactivity for the user.
- check box
- A form field that can be selected by clicking a box. When a box is
selected, it is usually displayed with a check mark or X. Check boxes are usually grouped
to represent a set of non-exclusive choices. See also radio button.
- child web
- See subweb.
- class selector
- In a cascading style sheet's style definition (or style rule), a subset
of a selector that controls whether the same selector can be used for slightly different
styles in different situations.
- client
- On a local area network or the Internet, a computer that accesses shared
network resources provided by another computer. See also server.
- client-side image map
- An image map that encodes the destination URL of each hotspot directly on
a Web page. Client-side image maps do not require processing from a server to allow a site
visitor to follow the hyperlinks on the image map. However, not all Web browsers support
client-side image maps. See also image map.
- client-side program
- On the Internet, a program that is run on a client computer rather than
on a server computer.
- color average tool
- In FrontPage, the action of dragging the eyedropper tool across a
selection of graphics or various solid colors on a Web page and thereby determining the
average color spectrum of these.
- comment
- In FrontPage, text that can be viewed in Page view that will not be
displayed in a Web browser. Comment text appears purple in Page view and is used to insert
notes to authors and editors during the construction of the page. Site visitors can reveal
comments by viewing the source HTML of the page containing the comments.
- component
- A built-in FrontPage object that is evaluated and executed when an author
saves the page or, in some cases, when a site visitor browses to the page. Most components
generate HTML. Components in FrontPage include Search forms, which provide full
text-searching capability in a web, and Save Results form handlers, which gather
information from a form and store it in a file or send it to a specified e-mail address.
The FrontPage Software Developer's Kit contains instructions for adding custom
components to Page view menus in FrontPage.
- Confirmation Field component
- A component in FrontPage that is replaced with the contents of a form
field. It is useful on a form confirmation page, where it can display a site visitor's
name or any other data entered into a field.
- confirmation page
- A page that is displayed in a Web browser, confirming that data entered
into a form has been successfully submitted. You point to a form's confirmation page in
the form handler's dialog box.
- current page
- In FrontPage, the page that is currently being edited in Page view.
- current web
- In FrontPage, the web that is currently open.
- custom dictionary
- A list of words not in the standard dictionary that an author wants the
spelling checker to accept as correct. FrontPage shares its spelling dictionaries with
those of Microsoft Office.
- database
- A file containing records of information that are organized and presented
to serve a specific purpose, such as the facilitation of searching, sorting, and
recombination of data. Databases can be published on the World Wide Web to let site
visitors look up information in records or add new information to the database.
- database results region
- In FrontPage, an area on an Active Server Page that can be dynamically
populated by the results of a database query when the page is displayed in a Web browser.
- data connection
- In FrontPage, a connection that specifies the name, type, location, and
optional information for a database file.
- data validation
- A set of rules you can apply to form fields to restrict the type of
information site visitors enter into forms. For example, you can set rules so that only
letters, and not numbers, can be entered into a "name" field on a form.
- Database Results Wizard
- In FrontPage, a wizard that guides you through creating a region on a
page that displays information retrieved from the records of a database. You can use an
existing database to accomplish this, or let the wizard create one for you.
- index hyperlink
- In an image map, the hyperlink that site visitors follow when they click
in an area of the picture where there are no hotspots. See also hotspot.
- design-time control
- An ActiveX control that is used while designing or editing a page.
Design-time controls that are installed on the client computer are listed in Page view in
FrontPage. See also ActiveX.
- Discussion form handler
- In FrontPage, a form handler that allows site visitors to participate in
an online discussion. The Discussion form handler collects information from a form,
formats it into an HTML page, and adds the page to a table of contents and to a text
index. In addition, the Discussion form handler gathers information from the form and
stores it in a selected format.
- discussion group
- A FrontPage-based web that supports interactive discussions by site
visitors. Visitors submit topics or responses by entering and then submitting text in a
form. Visitors can search the group using a search form, or access articles using a table
of contents.
- Distributed Password Authentication
- (DPA) An advanced, distributed method of user authentication from
Microsoft, allowing for single user log-on. DPA support is provided by the Microsoft
Membership System and is optimized for the needs of Internet service providers and online
services.
- domain name
- The address of a network location in the format that identifies the owner
of that address in the format: server.organization.type. For example, www.whitehouse.gov
identifies the Web server at the White House in the United States, which is part of the
U.S. government. See also network location.
- drop-down menu field
- A form field element that presents a list of selections in drop-down menu
style. A drop-down menu form field element can be configured to permit the selection of
many fields or a single field.
- Dynamic HTML
- (DHTML) An extension of the HTML language that enables the creation of
presentation effects for text and objects. In FrontPage, you can use the DHTML
Effects toolbar to add effects to page elements without the need to know
programming.
- editor
- A program that creates files or makes changes to existing files. In
FrontPage, Page view is a Web page editor, and the HTML tab in Page view
is an HTML editor. You can associate files in FrontPage-based webs with external editors,
so that double-clicking these files opens them in their associated editing programs. For
example, you can associate picture files to be opened in your favorite image editing
program, such as Microsoft Image Composer.
- e-mail
- (electronic mail) The exchange of electronic text messages and computer
file attachments between computers over a communications network, such as a local area
network or the Internet.
- E-mail form handler
- See Save Results form handler.
- embedded files
- In FrontPage, graphics, pictures, sounds, and video clips that have been
inserted on a page in Page view from a file system or from the clipboard. You are prompted
to save embedded files when you save the current page.
- embedded style sheet
- A cascading style sheet that is embedded on a page. Styles in an embedded
style sheet can be applied only to the page containing the style sheet, and will either
extend or override styles defined in any external style sheet that is linked to the page.
- EPS
- (Encapsulated PostScript) An extension of the PostScript graphics file
format developed by Adobe Systems. EPS enables PostScript graphics files to be
incorporated into other documents. FrontPage can import EPS files.
- executable folder
- A folder in a FrontPage-based web, from which scripts and executable
programs can be run on a Web server. Server administrators may prohibit the use of
executable folders.
- external hyperlink
- A hyperlink pointing to a page or file that is outside of the current
web.
- external style sheet
- A cascading style sheet in a file with a .css file name extension. The
.css file is comprised solely of style rules in valid .css syntax, without any surrounding
HTML tags. By defining styles in one or more external style sheets and linking them to
pages in your web, you ensure a consistent appearance throughout those pages. If you
change a style in the external style sheet, the change will be reflected in all of the
pages linked to that style sheet.
- FAQ
- (Frequently Asked Questions) A document listing common questions and
answers on a particular subject. FAQs are often posted on Internet newsgroups where new
participants ask the same questions that regular readers have already answered many times.
- file
- A named collection of information that is stored on a computer. Also, an
Internet protocol that refers to files on a disk or local area network. In FrontPage, you
can create hyperlinks to files (file://) in Page view.
- file server
- A computer running on a network that stores files and provides access to
them. Also called server. See also Web server.
- file type
- The format of a file, commonly indicated by its file name extension.
Computer applications usually work on a limited set of file types.
- firewall
- A method of protecting the files and programs on one network from users
on another network. A firewall blocks unwanted access to a protected network, while giving
the protected network access to networks outside of the firewall. A company will typically
install a firewall to give users access to the Internet while protecting their internal
information. FrontPage allows users to author webs on the Internet even from within a
protected network.
- folder
- A named storage area on a computer containing files and other folders.
- Folders view
- In FrontPage, the view of a web that shows how the content of the web is
organized. Similar to Windows Explorer, you can create, delete, copy, and move folders in
Folders view. Views in FrontPage provide different ways of looking at the information in
your web, so that you can effectively manage your site.
- followed hyperlink
- A hyperlink on a page that has been activated. Visited hyperlinks are
usually displayed by the Web browser in a specified color.
- form
- A set of data-entry fields on a page that are processed on a Web server.
The data is sent to the server when a site visitor submits the form by clicking on a
button or, in some cases, by clicking a graphic.
- form field
- A data-entry field on a page. A site visitor supplies information in a
field either by typing text or by selecting a field.
- form handler
- A program on a server that is executed when a site visitor submits a
form. A form in FrontPage is associated with a form handler in the Form Properties
dialog box.
- frame
- An area of a Web browser window defined by a frames page. A frame appears
in a Web browser as one of a number of different areas in which pages can be displayed. A
frame may be scrollable and resizable, and may have a border. You display a page in a
frame by creating a hyperlink to the page and specifying the frame as part of the
hyperlink. See also frames page.
- frames page
- A page that divides a Web browser's window into different areas called
frames that can independently display several Web pages. See also frame.
- Frames Page HTML tab
- The tab in Page view in FrontPage that shows the HTML of the active
frames page. See also frames page.
- frameset
- See frames page.
- FrontPage Editor
- In FrontPage 98 and earlier versions, the application for creating and
editing Web pages. In FrontPage 2000, you create and edit Web pages in Page view.
- FrontPage Explorer
- In FrontPage 98 and earlier versions, the application for maintaining,
testing, and publishing webs. In FrontPage 2000, you maintain, test, and publish webs
using any of five web views.
- FrontPage Server Extensions
- A set of programs and scripts that support authoring in FrontPage and
extend the functionality of a Web server. The FrontPage Server Extensions are available
for Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) and other popular Windows and UNIX Web
servers. To learn whether your Web server is supported, visit
http://www.microsoft.com/frontpage/
- FTP
- (File Transfer Protocol) The Internet service that transfers files from
one computer to another over standard phone lines. You can create FTP hyperlinks (ftp://)
in Page view in FrontPage.
- gateway script
- See CGI.
- GIF
- (Graphics Interchange Format) A graphics file format commonly used to
display indexed-color graphics on the World Wide Web. GIF is a compressed format, designed
to minimize file transfer time over standard phone lines. FrontPage can import and export
GIF files. See also interlaced GIF.
- graphics file formats
- FrontPage can import the following graphics file formats: BMP, EPS, GIF,
JPEG, PCD, PCX, PNG, RAS, TGA, TIFF, and WMF. When you save your web, FrontPage converts
these graphics (if necessary) to GIF, JPEG, or PNG file formats, based on their original
color depth.
- heading
- A paragraph style that is displayed in a typeface larger than normal
text. The size of a heading is related to its level: Heading 1 is the largest, Heading 2,
the next largest, and so on. Use headings to provide names or titles for text paragraphs
or entire pages.
- hidden field
- A form field that is invisible to a site visitor but supplies data to a
form handler. Each hidden field is implemented as a name-value pair. When a form is
submitted by a site visitor, its hidden fields are passed to the form handler along with
name-value pairs for each visible form field. See also name-value pair.
- hidden folder
- A folder in a web in FrontPage that has a name beginning with an
underscore character, as in _hidden. By index, pages and files in hidden folders cannot be
viewed in a Web browser.
- Hit Counter component
- A component in FrontPage that keeps track of the number of visitors to a
World Wide Web site.
- home page
- On the World Wide Web, an entry page for a set of Web pages and other
files in a Web site. The home page is displayed by index when a visitor surfs to the site
using a Web browser. The name of a home page depends on the type of Web server used to
host the Web site. Some Web servers reserve default.htm as the name for the home page,
while others name the home page default.htm.
- host
- See server.
- host name
- See network location.
- hotspot
- A graphically defined area in a graphic or picture containing a
hyperlink. A graphic with hotspots is called an image map. Hotspots are invisible in Web
browsers. Site visitors can tell that a hotspot is present because the mouse pointer
changes appearance when the mouse is moved over the graphic. See also image map.
- Hover Button component
- An animated button in the navigation bar on a Web page that is activated
when the mouse pointer is moved over the button or when the button is clicked. See also navigation
bar.
- HTML
- (Hypertext Markup Language) The standard markup language used for
documents on the World Wide Web. HTML development is carried out by the World Wide Web
Consortium. The HTML language uses tags to indicate how Web browsers should display page
elements such as text and graphics, and how Web browsers should respond to user actions
such as hyperlink activation by means of a key press or mouse click. Most Web browsers,
notably Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator, recognize HTML tags beyond
those included in the present standard. FrontPage reads and writes HTML files and no
knowledge of the HTML language is required. See also World Wide Web Consortium.
- HTML attribute
- A value used within an HTML tag to assign additional properties to the
object being defined. FrontPage assigns some attributes automatically when you create an
object such as a paragraph or image map. You can assign other attributes by editing the
object's Properties dialog box.
- HTML character encoding
- A standard table which associates a numeric index with each character in
a character set. The table is used when you create a Web page for use in a specific
language. Also called code page.
- HTML tab
- In FrontPage, the tab in Page view that you click to display a page's
HTML code. You can directly edit a page's HTML on this tab.
- HTML tag
- A text string used in HTML to identify a page element's type, format, and
appearance. FrontPage automatically creates HTML tags to represent each element on a page.
- HTTP
- (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) The Internet protocol that enables Web
browsers to retrieve information from World Wide Web servers.
- hyperlink
- A pointer from text, from a picture or a graphic, or from an image map to
a page or file on the World Wide Web. On the World Wide Web, hyperlinks are the primary
way to navigate between pages and among Web sites. Also called link.
- Hyperlinks view
- A view in FrontPage that shows the status of the hyperlinks in your web.
The list includes both internal and external hyperlinks, and graphically indicates whether
the hyperlinks have been verified or whether they are broken. Views in FrontPage provide
different ways of looking at the information in your web, so that you can effectively
manage your site.
- hypertext
Originally, any textual information on a computer
containing jumps to other information. The hypertext jumps are called hyperlinks. On the
World Wide Web, hypertext is the primary way to navigate between pages and among Web
sites. Hypertext on Web pages has been expanded to include hyperlinks from text, from a
picture or a graphic, and from image maps.
- ID selector
- In a cascading style sheet style definition (or style rule), a selector
that is used to define a style for an individual page element, usually as an inline style.
- IIS
- See Internet Information Services.
- image map
- A graphic containing one or more invisible regions, called hotspots,
which are associated hyperlinks. Typically, an image map gives site visitors visual cues
about the information made available by clicking each part of a picture or graphic. For
example, a geographical map could be made into an image map by assigning hotspots to each
region of interest on the map.
- Include Page component
- A component in FrontPage that is replaced with the contents of another
page in the web. This lets you update parts of many pages in one step.
- initial page
- The page that is initially displayed in a frame when a site visitor
browses to a frames page containing the frame. In FrontPage, you can assign the initial
page to a frame in Page view. See also frames page.
- inline style
- A method of applying cascading style sheet properties and values to an
element on a page, such as a table, graphic, or ActiveX control. You can use this method
even if the page is not linked to an external style sheet or does not contain an embedded
style sheet.
- interlaced GIF
- A picture in GIF format that is gradually displayed in a Web browser,
showing increasingly detailed versions of the picture until the entire file has finished
downloading. See also GIF.
- internal hyperlink
- In FrontPage, a hyperlink pointing to any page or file within the current
web. See also hyperlink.
- internal web
- A Web site created within an organization and accessible only to members
of that organization on an intranet. See also intranet.
- Internet
- The worldwide collection of computers, networks and gateways that use
TCP/IP protocols to communicate with one another. At the heart of the Internet are
high-speed data communication lines between major host computers, consisting of thousands
of commercial, government, educational, and other computer systems that route data and
messages. Currently, the Internet offers a range of services to users, such as e-mail, the
World Wide Web, FTP, Usenet newsgroups, Gopher, IRC, telnet, and others.
- Internet address
- See network location.
- Internet Information Services
- (IIS) Microsoft's brand of Web server software, utilizing Hypertext
Transfer Protocol to deliver World Wide Web documents. IIS incorporates various functions
for security, allows for CGI programs, and also provides for FTP servers.
- Internet service provider
- A business that supplies Internet connectivity services to individuals,
businesses, and other organizations. Some ISPs are large national or multinational
corporations that offer access in many locations, while others are limited to a specific
city or region.
- intranet
- A network designed for information processing within a company or
organization. Its uses include such services as document and software distribution, access
to databases, and training. An intranet is so called because it usually employs
applications associated with the Internet, such as Web pages, Web browsers, FTP sites,
e-mail, newsgroups, and mailing lists, accessible only to those within the organization.
See also firewall.
- IP
- (Internet Protocol) Internet software that divides data into packets for
transmission over the Internet. Computers must run IP to communicate across the Internet.
See also TCP.
- IP address
- (Internet Protocol address) The standard way of identifying a computer
that is connected to the Internet, much the way a telephone number identifies a telephone
on a telephone network. An IP address is four numbers separated by periods, and each
number is less than 256, for example, 192.200.44.69. Your Web server administrator or
Internet service provider will assign your computer an IP address.
- IP address mask
- (Internet Protocol address mask) A range of IP addresses defined so that
only computers with IP addresses within the range are allowed access to an Internet
service. To mask a portion of the IP address, replace it with the asterisk wild card
character (*). For example, 192.44.*.* represents every computer on the Internet with an
IP address beginning with 192.44.
- ISAPI
- (Internet Server Application Programming Interface) A Web server
application-development interface, developed by Process Software and Microsoft, that can
be used in place of CGI.
- ISP
- See Internet service provider.
- Java
- A general-purpose programming language created by Sun Microsystems.
Currently, the most widespread use of Java is in programming small applications, or
applets, for the World Wide Web. See also Java applet.
- Java applet
- A Java class that is loaded and run by an already-running Java
application such as a Web browser. Java applets can be downloaded and executed by a Web
browser capable of interpreting Java, such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape
Navigator. Java applets are frequently used to add multimedia effects and interactivity to
Web pages, such as video displays, animations, calculators, real-time clocks, and
interactive games. Applets can be activated automatically when the page containing them is
displayed in a Web browser, or they may require some action on the part of the site
visitor, such as clicking an element on the page.
- JavaScript
- A scripting language developed by Netscape Communications and Sun
Microsystems, Inc. Compared to Java, JavaScript is limited in performance because it is
not compiled before execution. Basic online applications and functions can be added to Web
pages with JavaScript, but the number and complexity of available application programming
interface functions are fewer than those available with Java. JavaScript code, which is
included in a Web page along with the HTML code, is generally considered easier to write
than Java, especially for novice programmers. A JavaScript-compliant Web browser, such as
Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator, is required to interpret JavaScript
code.
- JPEG
- (Joint Photographic Experts Group) A graphics file format used to display
high-resolution color graphics on the World Wide Web. JPEG graphics apply a user-specified
compression scheme that can significantly reduce the large file sizes usually associated
with photo-realistic color graphics. A higher level of compression results in lower
quality, whereas a lower level of compression results in higher quality. FrontPage can
import and export JPEG files. See also progressive JPEG.
- LAN
- (local area network) A computer network technology designed to connect
computers separated by a short distance. A LAN can be connected to the Internet and can
also be configured as an intranet.
- link
- See hyperlink.
- live web
- A web that has been published to a Web server and can currently be
browsed by site visitors. Editing a live web with FrontPage lets site visitors immediately
see all page updates and changes every time the page is saved. See also staging we
- mailto
- The Internet protocol used to send electronic mail. You can create e-mail
hyperlinks in FrontPage.
- Marquee component
- A region on a page that displays a horizontally scrolling text message.
- META tag
- An HTML tag that must appear in the HEAD portion of the page. META tags
supply information about a page but do not affect its appearance. A standard META tag,
"generator," is used to indicate the type of editor that created the HTML page.
- Microsoft Image Composer
- A powerful image-editing application included with FrontPage that lets
you create original artwork or modify existing graphics for use in your webs.
- Microsoft Internet Explorer
- Microsoft's Web browser, available in Windows, Macintosh, and UNIX
versions. When Internet Explorer is installed with FrontPage, additional functionality is
provided, including dynamic page and themes preview in Page view.
- Microsoft Management Console
- (MMC) A graphical interface for Microsoft Internet Information Services
(IIS) that contains "snap-in" administrative tools, such as the FrontPage MMC
snap-in. See also Internet Information Services.
- Microsoft Visual Basic
- A high-level, visual-programming version of Basic. Visual Basic was
developed by Microsoft for building Windows-based applications.
- Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications
- (VBA) A macro-language version of Microsoft Visual Basic that is used to
program Windows applications and is included with several Microsoft applications. See also
Microsoft Visual Basic.
- Microsoft Visual Basic Scripting Edition
- (VBScript) A subset of the Visual Basic for Applications programming
language, optimized for Web-related programming. As with JavaScript, code for Visual
Basic, Scripting Edition is embedded in HTML documents. This version is included with
Microsoft Internet Explorer. See also Microsoft Visual Basic.
- Microsoft Visual SourceSafe
- A professional document source-control system developed by Microsoft.
FrontPage can be integrated with Visual SourceSafe when both applications are installed on
the same computer.
- MIME type
- (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions type) A method used by Web
browsers to associate files of a certain type with applications that display files of that
type.
- multi-hosting
- The ability of a Web server to support more than one Internet address and
more than one home page. Also called multi-homing.
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