DREAMWEAVER CS3
User Guide
395
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" leftmargin="0">
<table width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr bgcolor="#333366">
<td>Name</td>
<td><font color="#FFFFFF">Address</font></td>
<td><font color="#FFFFFF">Telephone Number</font></td>
</tr>
<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="LocationList" -->
<tr>
<td>Enter name</td>
<td>Enter Address</td>
<td>Enter Telephone</td>
</tr>
<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
</table>
</body>
The default color for non-editable text is gray; you can select a different color for the editable and non-editable
regions in the Preferences dialog box.
See also
“Customize code coloring preferences for a template” on page 418
Creating a Dreamweaver template
About creating Dreamweaver templates
You can create a template from an existing document (such as an HTML, Macromedia ColdFusion, or Microsoft
Active Server Pages document) or you can create a template from a new document.
After you create a template, you can insert template regions, and set template preferences for code color and template
region highlight color.
You can store additional information about a template (such as who created it, when it was last changed, or why you
made certain layout decisions) in a Design Notes file for the template. Documents based on a template do not inherit
the template’s Design Notes.
Note:
Templates in Adobe Dreamweaver differ from templates in some other Adobe Creative Suite products in that page
sections of Dreamweaver templates are fixed (or uneditable) by default.
For a tutorial on creating templates, see
www.adobe.com/go/vid0157
.
For a tutorial on using templates, see
www.adobe.com/go/vid0158
.
See also
“Types of template regions” on page 387
“Setting authoring preferences for templates” on page 418
“Associate Design Notes with files” on page 103
September 4, 2007