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Junior Member
Paragraphs
Hi. This may sound a wierd question but you know on websites when you have the some text that says if you want to read more then when you click on that it takes you to another page which displays the article in full. What is that called? (An answer to this may help me find this in the NF12 documentation but if you wanted to elaborate more by pointing me further in the right direction that would be most helpful)
Yours in websites....
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Senior Member
A link or an anchor, up to you how you do it.
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Re: Paragraphs
On 1/22/2012 4:56 PM, Rick_England wrote:
> Hi. This may sound a wierd question but you know on websites when you
> have the some text that says if you want to read more then when you
> click on that it takes you to another page which displays the article in
> full. What is that called? (An answer to this may help me find this in
> the NF12 documentation but if you wanted to elaborate more by pointing
> me further in the right direction that would be most helpful)
>
> Yours in websites....
>
>
A few varied names for that. Some tools call it a "continue on" feature
in the text, have seen some term it "additional text", etc.
Joe
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Junior Member
Thanks chaps. I understand (or think I do which is a dangerous concept) links and anchors but can't see whether this is what I'm trying to achieve. Are you saying Kiwi that I would have say a para with "Read on...." which links to another internal page which then displays an article in full. The best example I can find is like the BBC website. Here if you click on almost any news item it takes you someplace else with the full story on... Is this by links? Does that mean I have to create a separate page within the same master border for each particular new item on my site. If thats how its done then fine? Joe - thanks for your comments I looked for both these terms in Net Objects Fusion 12 help pages but can't see them but I do appreciate your comments.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
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Senior Member
Hello Rick,
Yes, if you say in NoF you will need a new page for each item.
Or, as I keep banging on, combine NoF with 4D Site Designer and get the best of both worlds, as you can see at Oxford New Zealand, among other sites.
HTH.
David
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