About creating and designing web pages

Some of the content in this topic may not be applicable to some languages.

Web pages are the basic documents of the World Wide Web and are written in HTML (Hypertext Markup Language). Web pages can either be part of a web site, or they can stand alone. However, many features in Microsoft FrontPage are only useful if you are working with a web site. For example, a link bar, which lets a site visitor navigate to other pages in a web, is meaningless in the context of a single page.

To help you create professional-looking and well-designed web pages, FrontPage provides several page templates so you can quickly create pages with a variety of layouts and functions. For example, you can use a FrontPage template to create a two-column page or a page with a search form. You can also use one of several themes to create pages with a consistent design. A theme contains unified design elements with a color scheme, including fonts, graphics, backgrounds, navigation bars, horizontal lines, and other page elements.

If you prefer to design and lay out pages yourself, you can start with a blank page, and then:

Support for HTML

You do not need to know HTML to use FrontPage. While you edit pages as you would in a word processor — typing and formatting text, and adding graphics, tables, and other page elements — FrontPage adds the HTML tags in the background. Your page is displayed to you as it would appear in a Web browser. However, you can display the HTML tags on the page, and if you are familiar with HTML, you can write and edit the HTML tags yourself.