
Giving Your Page a Title
Every HTML document you create needs to have a title. The title is used primarily for
document identification. It is displayed in a browser’s title bar, indicates the content of a
page, and appears as the bookmark name in Favorites lists. You should choose a short
informative phrase, beginning with the site name, which is descriptive of the document’s
purpose. Get into the habit of adding a title to each page you create before you add text or
graphics to the page. If you forget, Dreamweaver titles the file Untitled Document by default.
To give a title to your page, click the tab for the yoga.html document and type Yoga Sangha
Project into the Title text field on the document toolbar. Press Return (Macintosh) or
Enter (Windows), or click in the yoga.html document.
If you don’t see the document toolbar with the Title text field, choose View >
Toolbars > Document.
The Title text field initially displays Untitled Document—you are now replacing that
placeholder title with a title for a page in the project site.
You can also specify the title of your document in the Title text field located
in the Title/Encoding category of the Page Properties dialog box. To access the
Page Properties dialog box, choose Modify > Page Properties.
32 LESSON 1
01_DW8 tfs(1-38).qxd 03/06/2006 12:20 PM Page 32
ISBN: 0-558-13856-X
Macromedia Dreamweaver 8: Training from the Source, by Khristine Annwn Page. Copyright © 2006 by Adobe Systems, Inc.
Published by Peachpit Press, a Pearson Company.
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