Click the menu Tools->Preferences->General... to bring up the following dialog box. You use the General Preferences dialog box to control the way your NaviPress behaves.
General Preferences dialog
If you turn off Load Remote Images, then remote images in pages are not loaded unless you click on them.
If you turn on Prefetch Pages, NaviPress preloads pages to which the current page has links (so when you click on one of these links it will already be loaded).
On Unix systems either the Delete or the Backspace keys deletes the previous character. On the PC the Delete key normally deletes the next character and the backspace key deletes the previous character. On the Macintosh the Backspace key is labeled Delete, and there is no real Delete key. Setting Unix Style Delete causes the Delete key to delete the previous character; not setting it causes the Delete key to delete the next character. A CTRL+D always deletes the next character.
Short Menus makes from the menu bar simpler. It includes only the most commonly used choices and does not show the shortcut keys.
This item will allow NaviPress to create many of the more obscure list possibilities allowed by HTML.
Once this is set, any MiniWebs created use file names that are either restricted to DOS eight-dot-three file name format, to Macintosh file names, or to Posix (for Unix, NT, and Windows 95). Unix servers usually allow 256-character file names. Selecting DOS (the most restrictive convention) makes it easier to port MiniWebs from one system to another.
HTML specifies that adjacent white space characters (spaces, tabs, etc.) are displayed as a single space (except in "Preformatted" paragraphs). This is often confusing to people who expect typing two spaces to show two spaces. To get around HTML you may set this final preference to Non-Breaking space. If you do this, then when you type in multiple spaces, some are converted into non-breaking spaces as needed to keep HTML from condensing them into one space. This means that the text will wrap badly.
The HTML 3.0 specification and the Netscape standard vary in a number of areas. With this preferences option, you may decide how you want NaviPress to behave; this selection affects both browsing and authoring.
When NaviPress starts up, when given no arguments on the command line, it either displays a user-specified home page, an untitled page, or an untitled MiniWeb and page, depending on which option you select: Home Page, Blank Page, or MiniWeb.
The Mail address is used to provide a password for anonymous ftp, a return address for all mail sent from NaviPress and an identification line on all HTTP requests.
The SMTP Mail Host is used to proxy mail requests.
The Name Server is optional in almost all cases. You may fill it in to override the default name server at your site. The name server interprets Web page addresses, finding the addresses that correspond to names.
NaviPress does not handle gopher or WAIS requests. If you are browsing links to gopher servers you have to specify a Proxy server. When NaviPress finds an access method that it does not understand it sends it to the specified proxy server, which handles the request. Normally this is a CERN server, with a name in the form hostname:port, e.g. www.navisoft.com:81. Do not type the leading http.
If your site is behind a fire wall, then you even need to proxy http requests through that machine, so click the Always Proxy check box. If you are not behind a fire wall, do not check the Always Proxy box. You only want to proxy non-http requests. If your site is behind a fire wall then you do not want to proxy domains on your side of the fire wall, so list them in the "except these domains" text field. If your site does SOCKS proxying, fill in the SOCKS fields.
When NaviPress loads a local file it needs to know how to interpret it. It does this by looking at the extension on the file name, from which it can generate a MIME type.
When NaviPress gets a link to a file which it does not know how to display (for example a video clip) it looks through this list for a program to run to display the file. NaviPress looks up the file's MIME type in this list, and if it finds anything appropriate runs that program. If it finds nothing appropriate it attempts to save the file on your local system.
The Tools->Preferences->MIME/Viewer... option associates MIME types (such as images in a particular format) with external programs that can view those files. This list causes the right external viewer to start, if necessary.
MIME/Viewer dialog
You may have NaviPress invoke a program to handle translation of HTML to another format.
You may connect a MIME type to a 32X32 icon file to be used to display files with that MIME type in a MiniWeb.
This is a list of known NaviServers that is shown to you at various points in the application. For example, the list of servers that appears in the File->Open dialog is set in this Tools->Preferences->NaviServers... menu.
The animation preference allows you to select a NaviPress animation file to play in the upper right corner of the page window during page or file download.
This allows you to select what icons you want displayed on the toolbar. The toolbar does not wrap, if you specify too many icons you will not see them, unless you make the NaviPress window larger.