You need to type © in an HTML file to insert the copyright symbol.
For Netscape, this is done using the tag. You can also do this with the Netscape refresh tag, as described earlier. Just put the URL of the audio file in the CONTENT field. There is also a MS Internet Explorer specific tag to do this: which plays the file specified in the SRC attribute automatically. You can add LOOP followed by a value or the keyword "INFINITE" to indicate how many times the sound should be played.
Many browsers identify themselves when they request a document. A CGI script will have this information available in the HTTP_USER_AGENT environment variable, and it can use that to send out a version of the document which is optimized for that browser. Keep in mind not all browsers identify themselves correctly. Microsoft Internet Explorer, for example, claims to be "Mozilla 1.2" to get at Netscape enhanced documents. And of course, if a cache proxy keeps the Netscape enhanced document, someone with an other browser will also get this document if he goes through the cache.
Specifies the text color with a color name (like "red") Specifies the text color with a hex code (like "#ff0000") Specifies the text color with an rgb code (like "rgb(255,0,0)")
Because copies of your HTML files and images are stored in cache, it is impossible to prevent someone from being able to save them onto their hard drive. If you are concerned about your images, you may wish to embed a watermark with your information into the image.
There is no way in standard HTML to specify where page breaks will occur when printing a page. HTML was designed to be a device-independent structural definition language, and page breaks depend on things like the fonts and paper size that the person viewing the page is using.
The method parameter specifies which method the client is using to send information to the WEB server. The method determines which parameter you will find the CGI request data in:
POST - post_args
GET - httpargs
Older versions of Netscape Navigator seems to convert pixel-based frame dimensions to whole percentages, and to use those percentage-based dimensions when laying out the frames. Thus, frames with pixel-based dimensions will be rendered with a slightly different size than that specified in the frameset document. The rounding error will vary depending on the exact size of the browser window. Furthermore, Navigator seems to store the percentage-based dimensions internally, rather than the original pixel-based dimensions. Thus, when a window is resized, the frames are redrawn based on the new window size and the old percentage-based dimensions.
The simplest way to conver Excel to HTML is to use the Excel "Save as Web Page" function. This will convert the Excel spreadsheet into an HTML document that can be uploaded to a Web site or edited in an HTML editor. You can then use an HTML editor like Dreamweaver to convert the ugly HTML that Excel creates into clean HTML that will load quickly on your Web site.
There is no way in standard HTML to specify where page breaks will occur when printing a page. HTML was designed to be a device-independent structural definition language, and page breaks depend on things like the fonts and paper size that the person viewing the page is using.