Creating and editing a browser profile
You can create a browser profile by modifying an existing profile. For example, to create a profile for a future version of Microsoft Internet Explorer, you can open the profile for the most recent version of Internet Explorer that has a profile, add any new tags or attributes introduced in the new version, and save it as a profile for the new version.
NOTE | Before you create a browser profile for a new version of a browser, check the Adobe Exchange for Adobe Dreamweaver site at www.macromedia.com/exchange/dreamweaver to see if Adobe has supplied a browser profile that you can download and install using the Extension Manager. |
To create or edit a browser profile:
- Open an existing profile for editing.
If you're creating a new profile, open the profile that most closely resembles the profile you want to create, and save the file under a new filename.
- If you're creating a new profile, change the name that appears on the first line of text in the file. (Two profiles cannot have the same name.)
- Add any new tags or attributes that you know are supported by the browser, using the syntax shown in About browser-profile formatting.
If you don't want to receive error messages about a particular unsupported tag, add it to the list of supported tags. If you do this, save the profile in a separate file with a new filename (such as Browsername x.x limited). Giving this alternate profile a new name preserves the original profile with only the tags that are truly supported.
- Delete any tags or attributes that are not supported by the browser.
This step is probably unnecessary if you are creating a profile for a new version of Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer because browsers rarely drop support for tags.
- Add any custom error messages according to the syntax shown in About browser-profile formatting.
The profiles that come with Adobe Dreamweaver list all supported tags for the specified browsers. To add a custom error message to a tag, type
!msg = "message"
after!Error
. The following example shows information that appears in the Netscape Navigator 3.0 profile (along with other attributes not shown here):<!ELEMENT HR name="Horizontal Rule"><!ATTLIST HRCOLOR !Error>
To add a custom error message enter !msg= followed by your error message in quotation marks ("):
<!ELEMENT HR name="Horizontal Rule"><!ATTLIST HRCOLOR !Error !msg="Internet Explorer 3.0 supports the COLOR tag inhorizontal rules,but Netscape Navigator 3.0 does not.">
- You can use
!Error
for all error situations, or you can use!Warning
or!Info
to indicate that a tag will be ignored but will not actually cause an error.