Handbook:
Onscreen Fundamentals
<< Netscape Handbook: Contents
<- Learn Netscape
-> Mail, News, and Bookmark
>> Index
- The Netscape window
- Window summary
- Content area, frames, and text
fields
- Security indicators
- Document information
- Toolbar
- Directory buttons
The
Netscape window
This section on onscreen fundamentals describes what you see in the
main Netscape window. Most of the tools and text fields that help you
to navigate the Internet are visible, though you have the option of
hiding some tools in order to give more space on the screen to the
content area.
The next section describes a window's graphical elements. Subsequent
sections go into more detail on page displays and button actions.
Subsequent chapters explore mail, news, bookmarks, primary menu
items, preferences panels, and additional application features.
You can open multiple Netscape windows to view multiple pages of
information. The title bar of the window shows the title of the
currently loaded page. You'll also find that some pages are designed
to be a patchwork of pages. These patchwork pages contain rectangular
frames, each frame presents its own page information (similar to the
picture-in-picture feature offered in some television sets).
Window summary
- Colors and underlining
Colors or underlining highlight words on a page that link to new
pages. Clicking on the highlighted text initiates the transfer. On
black and white monitors, underlining highlights links. When you
select text in a field, the selection is highlighted (by default, in
a different color than the colors used for links).
- Status indicator
The status indicator (the company logo) animates when a transfer
is in progress. Click on the logo to bring the company home page.
- Progress bar
The progress bar animates to show the progress of the current
operation. The bar shows the percentage done of document layout as a
page loads and the percentage of kilobytes loaded as an external
image loads.
- Mail icon
Click on the mail icon (the small envelope in the bottom-right of
the Netscape, Mail, and News windows) to display the Mail window (if
not already open) and retrieve for new messages. The mail icon
includes a question mark (?) if Netscape cannot automatically check
the mail server for new messages. The mail icon includes an
exclamation point if the news server has new messages for you.
- Window title bar
An author of a page specifies the title as part of the page's HTML
source text.
- Page display
The content area displays a page. Text can be selected and copied.
The content area of some pages is segmented into rectangular frames,
each frame containing its own page. A page's background can be set by
you or determined by the transmitted page. The location field lets
you enter the location (URL) of a page you wish to bring to screen.
The status message field and title bar text are read-only.
- Security indicators
The security indicator below the content area shows whether a
document is secure (doorkey icon on blue) or insecure (broken doorkey
icon on gray). The secure doorkey icon is displayed with two teeth
for high-grade encryption and one tooth for medium-grade. A blue
colorbar above the content area indicates a secure document. A gray
colorbar indicates an insecure document.
- Document information
Choosing the View|Document Info menu item lets you see
composition and security information about the current page.
- Toolbar buttons
Toolbar buttons activate the Netscape features you'll most
commonly use. Click on the buttons to revisit pages, reload pages,
load images, open locations, print pages, find text, and stop
transfers in progress. You can choose to have the buttons displayed
as pictures, text, or both by setting the panel item in
Options|General|Appearance. The Mail and News windows each
offer a distinct set of toolbar buttons.
- Directory buttons
Directory buttons display pages of information that help you
browse the Internet. Click on the buttons to find out what's new and
cool, use Internet search and directory tools, participate in
newsgroups, and read the handbook.
Content area, frames, and text fields
- Content area
The content area contains the current page brought by the most
recently requested link. Vertical and horizontal scroll bars might be
present to view pages larger than the screen area. The content area
displays HTML-formatted pages that often include inline images stored
in the GIF and JPEG graphic file formats. Other file formats
represented by links in the content area (for example, a sound file)
can be accessed using external helper applications. You can copy text
to the clipboard by selecting the text, then choosing
File|Copy. Unlike a word processor, you won't see a blinking
insertion bar. Alternatively, you can select text by clicking once at
one end of a selection, then holding down the shift key and clicking
a second time with the cursor pointing at the other end of the
selection.
- Frames
The content area of some pages is segmented into rectangular
frames, each frame containing its own page. A page containing frames
is a top-level page (or frameset). Generally, toolbar and menu items
affect the top-level page. The pages within each individual frame may
have scroll bars. You can select a frame by clicking inside it. Some
commands, such as keyboard shortcuts, affect only the selected frame.
Likewise, some menu items, such as printing and document mailing,
apply to a frame alone. You can resize frames by positioning the
cursor in the border between frames (the cursor changes shape) and
dragging the adjacent frames to a new position. Clicking on a link
within a frame may affect the page within the frame, pages within
other frames, or the top-level page. Frames and the actions of their
links are created by page authors using HTML
- Backgrounds
The background of the content area may vary according to a
preference item you can set in the Color panel (not on UNIX).
You can set the background to a default of gray, a custom color of
your choosing, or an image file you select. You can also determine if
your choice of background should always be used or if the background
transmitted with a page should override your choice.
- Location/Go to
The location field shows you the
location of the current page and can be used to enter the location
(the URL address) of the page you wish to go to next. The label of
the location field reads Location after you bring a page. The
label changes to Go to if you enter text into the field.
Pressing the return key brings the page specified in the Go to
field and changes the label back to Location. On Windows, a
pull-down menu at the right of the field lets you choose a URL (the
10 most recent locations you've entered into the field are stored as
menu items) to revisit pages.
- Status message
The status message area contains text describing a page's
location or the progress of a connection to a page. When the cursor
is positioned over highlighted words (or an image) serving as a link
to a page, the status message field shows the URL that will be used
to bring the page to the screen. When the Auto Load Image
option is unchecked and the cursor points over an image, the status
message shows the alternate text for the image and, if the image is a
link, the URL. When the cursor points over an image with active
areas, the status messages shows the description for the active area.
During connections, the status message field reports progress in
contacting the URL source, loading pages, and loading inline
information.
- Error messages
Error message result from a variety of situations. The Netscape
application tries to evaluate any problem you encounter and present
information to help you solve or circumvent it. The most common error
messages result from trying to view a page that isn't available.
Often, this occurs because the server issuing the page is temporarily
shut down or too busy with other connections to handle your request.
Occasionally, the page is no longer available at the specified URL.
If you would like to report a problem, you should note the exact
wording of the error message. The Help menu offers items for
giving feedback and getting support.
Security indicators
A document has one of three security states: secure, insecure, or
mixed. The most prominent security indicator, located at the screen's
bottom-left, is a doorkey on blue for secure documents and a broken
doorkey on gray for insecure documents. The secure doorkey icon
varies slightly depending on the grade of encryption: the doorkey has
two teeth for high-grade and one tooth for medium-grade. The colorbar
over the content area is blue for secure and gray for insecure. A
mixed document, with insecure information omitted, is shown as
secure.
A URL beginning with https:// shows that the document came from
a secure server. To connect to an HTTP server that offers security,
insert the letter "s" so that the URL begins with https://.
Use http:// otherwise. Similarly, a news URL that starts with
snews: (instead of news:) shows that the document comes
from a secure news server (again, insert the letter "s" if your news
server offers security). Use two slashes (//) after the colon
(:) for news servers other than the default one. Chose the
View|Document Info menu item for security details.
A secure document can only have inline information from secure
sources. The insecure information on a mixed security document is
replaced by a mixed security icon. Bringing a mixed security document
to screen produces a notification dialog.
If a form appears on a secure page that has an insecure submit
process, a notification dialog always appears. The warning states
that although the document is secure, the submission you are about to
make is insecure and could be compromised by a third party. If you
are sending passwords, credit cards numbers, or other information you
would like to keep private, it would be safer for you to cancel the
submission.
If an insecure document contains secure information (either inline or
as part of a form), no special action is taken. The document is
considered insecure. This includes insecure forms with secure
submission processes.
Several notification dialog boxes inform you about the security status
of documents. You can choose whether or not to receive these dialogs
by setting the panel items in Options|Security|Alerts (or
by unchecking a dialog's Show this Alert Next Time box).
Notification dialog boxes
- When entering a secure document space, you are notified the
secure document is encrypted when transferred to you and any
information you send back is also encrypted.
- When leaving a secure document space, you are notified the
insecure document could be observed by a third party when transferred
to you and any information you send back could also be read by a
third party.
- When viewing a document with a mix of secure and insecure
information, you are notified the secure document that you just
loaded contained some insecure information that will not be shown.
- When you submit a form using any insecure submit process, you
are notified the submission process you are about to use is insecure.
This means that the information you are sending could be compromised
by a third party.
- You will always be notified if the document was expected to be
a secure document but is actually an insecure document (the document
location has been redirected to an insecure document). This means
that a third party could observe the document you are about to
bring.
Document information
To view elements of a document's structure, composition, and security
status, choose View|Document Info. The information, displayed in a
separate Netscape window, helps you establish the document's
authenticity and other security characteristics.
In the upper portion of the window, the document's structure is
presented as a hierarchy of the component URLs (for example, the URLs
of image files contained in the document). The lower portion of the
window consists of several fields stating location, type, source,
cache, length, modification, and character set encoding information,
plus the particulars of a document's security status.
To interpret the security status of a document, you should verify that
the information you see
- Is consistent with your knowledge of the party with whom you are
communicating.
- States that the document is secure or insecure.
- Designates for secure documents the encryption type in the
transmission and certification of the server.
If a document is insecure, the security information notifies you that
encryption is not used and there is no server certificate. If a
document is secure, the security information tells you encryption's
grade, export control, key size, and algorithm type. In addition, the
server certificate presents data that identifies
- Who the certificate belongs to (the organization being certified)
- Who the certificate was issued by (the certificate issuer)
- Serial number
- Valid certificate dates
- Certificate fingerprint (comprised of hexadecimal digits)
Like documents, certificate information is protected by encryption to
ensure authenticity and integrity. The data can include the
following:
- The server's fully qualified common or host name (such as
hostname.netscape.com)
- Optional department name
- Legal, registered organization name
- Locality or city the organization resides or is registered in
- State or province name
- Country name
Toolbar
- Back
Displays the previous page in the history list. A history list
references a hierarchy of pages you've already viewed.
- Forward
Displays the next page in the history list. When you use
Back or a history menu item to retrieve a page, using
Forward gets the proceeding page. Forward is only
available after you use Back or a history item.
- Home
Displays the home page designated in the General
Preferences|Appearance panel. The default is the Netscape home
page location.
- Reload
Redisplays the current Netscape page, reflecting any changes made
prior to the original loading. Netscape checks the network server to
see if any change to the page has occurred. If there's no change, the
original page is retrieved from the cache. If there's a change, the
updated page is retrieved from the network server. If you press the
Reload button while holding down the Shift key (Option key on
Macintosh), Netscape retrieves the page from the network server
regardless of whether the page has been updated (the cache is not
used).
- Images
Loads images into pages. This is useful when the Options|Auto
Load Images menu item is unchecked and icons have been
substituted for images. By loading images, you replace the icons with
the intended images.
- Open
Lets you enter a URL to display the specified page in the content
area.
- Print
Prints the content area of the current Netscape page. A dialog
box lets you select printing characteristics.
- Find
Lets you specify a word or phrase to locate within the current
Netscape page. You can specify case sensitivity and search direction.
If a match is found, the text is selected and displayed.
- Stop
Halts any ongoing transfer of page information.
Directory buttons
Directory buttons can also be accessed from the Directory or Help menus.
- What's New? (Directory|What's New?)
Information describing what's new on the Internet.
- What's Cool? (Directory|What's Cool?)
Information describing what's cool on the Internet.
- Handbook (Help|Handbook)
The Netscape Navigator Handbook online.
- Net Search (Directory|Internet Search)
A directory of Internet search engines.
- Net Directory (Directory|Internet Directory)
A master directory of other Internet directories.
- Software (Help|Software)
Information on Netscape Navigator software upgrades.
<< Netscape Handbook: Contents
<- Learn Netscape
-> Mail, News, and Bookmark
>> Index
info@netscape.com
Copyright © 1994-1996 Netscape Communications Corporation.