30 April 2010
This tutorial requires no previous knowledge of Dreamweaver. However, familiarity with web design concepts such as HTML and CSS will be helpful. The tutorials in this series are designed to be completed in order.
Beginning
Note: This tutorial series was originally written for Dreamweaver CS4 by Jon Michael Varese. It has been updated for Dreamweaver CS5 by David Powers. The content is still valid for Dreamweaver CS5.5.
This tutorial introduces you to the concept of an Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 site and shows you how to set up the project files for the Check Magazine sample website. In Dreamweaver, a site generally consists of two parts: a collection of files on a local computer (the local site) and a location on a remote web server to which you upload files when you're ready to make them publicly available (the remote site). You use the Dreamweaver Files panel to manage the files for your site.
The most common approach to creating a website with Dreamweaver is to create and edit pages on your local drive, and then upload copies of those pages to a remote web server for viewing on the web. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to set up only the local site so you can begin building web pages right away. Later, after you've completed the website, you'll learn how to create a remote site so that you can upload your files to a web server.
A follow-up tutorial series will show you how to adapt the website to use a server-side technology to create a simple content management system for a news page that draws its content dynamically from a database.
In this first part of the series, you will complete the following tasks:
In Dreamweaver, a site organizes on your local computer all the documents associated with your website and lets you track and maintain links, manage files, share files, and transfer your site files to a web server. Think of your Dreamweaver site as the "bucket" that contains all of the files and assets for your website.
A typical Dreamweaver site has at least two parts:
In some circumstances, you might have more than one remote folder. For example, if you work in a team environment, all members of the team might upload their files to a common testing server before they are deployed on the live website. Also, it's normal to set up a testing server when developing websites that use a server-side technology, such as Adobe ColdFusion or PHP. The site setup process in Dreamweaver CS5 has been changed to enable you to define multiple remote and testing servers.
Another reason for the changes is to simplify the process of defining a site in Dreamweaver CS5. All you need to do to start working is to give your site a name, and tell Dreamweaver where you want to store the files on your local computer. Dreamweaver CS5 automatically prompts you for further information about the site setup only when it's needed.
For more information about Dreamweaver sites in general, see Working with Dreamweaver sites in Dreamweaver Help.
When you create a local site, you can place any existing assets images or other pieces of content in the local site's root folder the main folder for the site . That way when you add content to your pages, the assets are there and ready for you to use.
The sample files included in the download ZIP file contain assets for the sample website you'll build in this tutorial series. The first step is to copy the sample files to an appropriate folder on your hard drive:
The check_cs5 folder is the folder you will use as the root folder main folder for your Dreamweaver site.
Note: The local root folder of your Dreamweaver site is normally the main or top-level folder for your website. It usually corresponds to a folder called public_html, www, or wwwroot on your remote server. For example, if you have a website at www.example.com, and have a file called news.html in the root folder, its URL is http://www.example.com/news.html. The normal practice is to give your local root folder the same name as the website without the top-level domain such as .com or .org . For example, I store the files for my website at http://foundationphp.com in a folder called foundationphp on my local hard drive.
You must define a Dreamweaver local site folder for each new website you create. Dreamweaver needs to know where your site files are to create all the internal links correctly, and to update them when you move files to a different location within your site.
Next, set up the site for this tutorial series and define as your local site folder the check_cs5 folder you copied into your Sites folder:
The Site Setup dialog box should now look like Figure 1.
Note: The file paths might differ, depending on where you created the Sites folder on your hard drive.
The Files panel in Dreamweaver now shows the new local root folder for your current site (see Figure 2). The file list in the Files panel acts as a file manager, allowing you to copy, paste, delete, move, and open files just as you would on a desktop.
For more information about how the Files panel works, see Work with files in the Files panel in Dreamweaver Help.
You've now defined a local site folder for the Check Magazine site. This is where you keep the working copies of web pages on your local computer. Later, if you want to publish your pages and make them publicly available, you'll need to define a remote folder—a place on a remote computer, running a web server that will hold published copies of your local files. You'll learn how to do that in part 6 of this tutorial series.
Now that you have finished defining your site, you can begin building your web pages by following Part 2 in this series, Creating the page layout.