Showing posts with label archive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label archive. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 February 2016

How to Edit a Website Using Microsoft WordIn Feburary 2016 17,

In Feburary 2016 17,
Download or find the HTML page for each web page of a website you want to edit. You can edit a website one page at a time with Word but you must first have access to the page. If it is on your local computer then you are set. If the page is on a server, you must either FTP the HTML document and its images to your local computer or you can save the page from a web browser. When saving an HTML web page from a browser, just make sure you choose to save it as a web page and not a web archive.
Open Microsoft Word. Go to the File menu and choose Open. Select the HTML file for the web page that you want to edit.
Edit what you see. The way that Word opens the HTML document, it will be similar to what you see in a live web page, except some of the pictures may be missing. You can type directly on the page to change elements such as the text. You can also use the tool bar to do some basic editing, such as bolding items or changing the font size.
Edit links by right clicking on the link and choosing “hyperlink” and then “edit hyperlink.” You can also use the “Insert” menu to add or edit pictures and objects. If you want to change an existing picture, just click on that picture before selecting the “insert” menu.
Click on View and then “HTML source” to see the web page in HTML code. This will let you edit the web page in a much more powerful way, if you know and understand HTML.
Go to the “File” menu and choose “Save as” and then type a name and select “web page” as the file type. It will save the file at whatever location you choose and will also create a folder for any files that go with the page. You can now upload the page and the folder to your web host.
In Feburary 2016 17,

Sunday, 14 February 2016

How to Open Files With PTB ExtensionsIn Feburary 2016 14,

In Feburary 2016 14,
Find out what the file is, if you're not already sure. There are three major possibilities: the PTB file could be a guitar tablature generated by Power Tab Editor; it could be a table generated by the computer-assisted design program Pro/Engineer; or it could be a backup archive created by the Peachtree accounting program. If you have either Pro/Engineer or Peachtree installed on your system, it's likely the source of the file; if you downloaded the PTB file from a guitar tab website, its identity isn't a mystery.
Obtain a program that will open the file. If it's a guitar tab file, you can download either the Power Tab Editor (for Windows) or TabView (for Mac OS) -- both programs are linked in Resources. Pro/Engineer and Peachtree files, meanwhile, require purchased programs to open -- see Resources.
Install the program. To install Power Tab Editor, right click the downloaded ZIP file, select 'Extract,' then double click 'Setup.exe' and follow the on-screen instructions. To install TabView, double click the downloaded DMG file and follow the on-screen instructions. To install Pro/Engineer or Peachtree, just insert the CD.
Navigate to the location of the PTB file and double click it to open it. If it doesn't work, run the program you installed and click 'File,' then 'Open,' and select the PTB file.
In Feburary 2016 14,