You can use graphics on your Web pages to provide information, artwork, theme elements, or a company logo. In addition to being decorative, graphics can be useful, for items such as navigational buttons. With Microsoft FrontPage, there are a variety of ways to lay out the graphics on your web pages.
Graphic used as a background
Banner graphic
Company logo
Graphical bullets
Link bar with graphic navigation buttons
Graphical horizontal line
Types and formats of graphics
You can also add graphics with the following file formats:
When you add a graphic other than a GIF or JPEG to a page and then save it, Microsoft FrontPage automatically converts the graphic to a GIF if it has 8 bits of color or less, or to a JPEG if it has more than 8 bits of color.
Setting the Properties of GIF and JPEGs
For a GIF, you can specify whether to allow a transparent color and whether the graphic is interlaced (that is, whether the graphic is displayed with increasing detail as it is downloaded).
For a JPEG, you can specify the quality and number of progressive passes. The lower the quality you set, the more the graphic will be compressed and the smaller its file size will be. The number of progressive passes refers to the number of passes that a Web browser makes in order to resolve a graphic as it downloads.
You can set these properties at the same time you save the web page and its graphics.
Animated GIFs and Videos
You can add animated GIFs and videos to your Web pages. An animated GIF, which is a sequential display of GIF graphics, can be created in a graphics program, and you can find animated GIFs on the World Wide Web.
You can add any videos to your page that can be played by the Windows Media Player, such as videos in AVI format. You can also set options for video playback, such as playing the video once when the page is first loaded; looping the video and playing it endlessly; or playing the video when the mouse is positioned over it. The animation in this example plays once when the page is opened.