6. In the final screen, you can preview your site, and tell OpenOffice where to publish the
site. If you have properly configured OpenOffice, you could upload the site directly to
your web server. Otherwise you can save to a local folder (as shown in Figure 14.6), or
zip it up for manual uploading to your server later. Click Finish to publish your site.
FIGURE 14.6 Complete your site by publishing to your server or a local directory.
NOTE
There are many schools of thought regarding whether a beginner is better served by a
set of templates or by learning the basic HTML tags. OpenOffice??™s Web Page Wizard
and similar programs are useful to a point, but you should still consider studying the
basics of HTML if you expect to move beyond the very basics with your web skills.
Unlike Microsoft Word, Writer/Web delivers very clean and standards-based HTML code.
The advantage of using a word processor such as OpenOffice for website creation is that
it??™s a familiar environment. Paragraph styles transfer easily from a standard document to
the web, and for the most part it is more WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) than
a specialized editor.
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