Adobe 38028779 User Guide - Page 531
capitalization as the attribute name. It also applies to attribute names that don't, have values
![]() |
UPC - 718659742201
View all Adobe 38028779 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 531 highlights
If you change the settings to , the Code view and Code inspector will display text paragraphs in the following way: A paragraph of text that is not indented from the left margin and that has one line break before and after the opening p tag, one line break before the closing p tag, and two line breaks after the closing p tag. Next paragraph. (Note that the number of line breaks after the closing tag and before the following opening tag is the greater of the two numbers specified-if you specify two line breaks before a tag and three after, the result is three line breaks between the closing tag and the next opening tag.) Some tag and attribute settings include the term namecase, which specifies that the tag or attribute is to be capitalized in exactly the way that you specify as the value of the namecase attribute. For example, onClick is specified in the SourceFormat.txt file as ; therefore, onClick is always displayed using that particular combination of uppercase and lowercase, regardless of user capitalization preferences. Another term used to specify capitalization is samecase, which specifies that the value of an attribute is to be capitalized the same way that the attribute's name is capitalized. For example, indicates that if Dreamweaver generates an align attribute, the value of the attribute will appear with the same capitalization as the attribute name. It also applies to attribute names that don't have values, so don't remove samecase from any of the attribute formatting specifications where it appears. The term noformat associated with a tag indicates that the line breaks, indentation, and capitalization of an existing instance of the tag are never changed to use the format specified in SourceFormat.txt. For a tag marked noformat, the format specified in SourceFormat.txt is used only when creating a new instance of the tag using Dreamweaver. For example, means that if you create a new pre tag using Dreamweaver tools, it will use the "1,0,0,1" line break specification when creating it; but if you already have a pre tag that you created by hand whose line breaks don't match this specification, and you edit that tag in the Design view, the line breaks don't change. Any attribute not specified in the SourceFormat.txt file uses the default formatting settings that you specify in the HTML Format preferences category. Customizing Dreamweaver 531
![](/manual_guide/products/adobe-38028779-user-guide-79c18ec/531.png)