DREAMWEAVER CS3
User Guide
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2
Enter a location to store your files or click the folder icon to browse to the folder.
This is your working directory for your Dreamweaver site—it is the place where you store your “in progress” files for
a Dreamweaver site. In the Dreamweaver Files panel, this folder is referred to as your local site.
See also
“Understanding local and remote folder structure” on page 41
Set Basic tab Testing Files options (URL prefix)
This dialog box appears if you selected a server technology earlier in the process. Its purpose is to specify a URL
prefix so Dreamweaver can use your testing server to display data and connect to databases while you work. A URL
prefix comprises the domain name and any of your website’s home directory’s subdirectories or virtual directories.
1
Enter the URL that users type in their browsers to open your web application, but do not include any filename.
Suppose your application’s URL is www.adobe.com/mycoolapp/start.jsp. In this case, you would enter the following
URL prefix: www.adobe.com/mycoolapp/.
If Dreamweaver runs on the same computer as your web server, you can use the term localhost as a stand-in for your
domain name. For example, suppose your application’s URL is buttercup_pc/mycoolapp/start.jsp. Then, you can
enter the following URL prefix: http://localhost/mycoolapp/.
2
Click Test URL to ensure that your URL works.
See also
“Set up a testing server” on page 48
“About the URL prefix for the testing server” on page 49
Set Basic tab Testing Files options (remote access)
The purpose of this dialog box is to select an access method for Dreamweaver to access your testing server.
Dreamweaver works with a testing server to generate and display dynamic content while you work. The testing server
can be your local computer, a development server, a staging server, or a production server. As long as the server can
process the kind of dynamic pages you plan to develop, the choice doesn’t matter.
❖
Select an access method from the pop-up menu and fill out the appropriate text boxes.
None
Keep this default setting if you do not plan to upload your site to a server.
FTP
Use this setting if you connect to your web server using FTP.
Local/Network
Use this setting to access a network folder, or if you are storing files or running your testing server
on your local computer.
RDS
(Remote Development Services) Use this setting if you connect to your web server using RDS. For this access
method, your remote folder must be on a computer running ColdFusion.
Microsoft Visual SourceSafe
Use if you connect to your web server using Microsoft Visual SourceSafe. Support for
this method is only available for Windows; to use it, you must have Microsoft Visual SourceSafe Client version 6
installed.
WebDAV
(Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning) Use if you connect to your web server using the
WebDAV protocol.
September 4, 2007