Bla...Bla....Links to Specific Sections within the
Current Document The technique is the same except the filename is omitted.
For example, to link to the ANP anchor from within MaineStats, enter: ...More
information about is available elsewhere in this document. Be sure to include
the tag at the place in your document where you want the link to jump to
Named anchors are particularly useful when you think readers will print
a document in its entirety or when you have a lot of short information
you want to place online in one file. Mailto You can make it easy for a
reader to send electronic mail to a specific person or mail alias by including
the mailto attribute in a hyperlink. The format is: For example, enter:
NCSA Publications Group to create a mail window that is already configured
to open a mail window for the NCSA Publications Group alias. (You, of course,
will enter another mail address!)Inline Images Most Web browsers can display
inline images (that is, images next to text) that are in X Bitmap (XBM),
GIF, or JPEG format. Other image formats are being incorporated into Web
browsers [e.g., the Portable Network Graphic (PNG) format]. Each image
takes time to process and slows down the initial display of a document.
Carefully select your images and the number of images in a document. To
include an inline image, enter: where ImageName is the URL of the image
file. a GIF file, then the filename part of ImageName must end with .gif.
Filenames of X Bitmap images must end with .xbm; JPEG image files must
end with .jpg or .jpeg; and Portable Network Graphic files must end with
.png. Image Size Attributes images it is downloading with the text. The
HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes let your browser set aside the appropriate
space (in pixels) for the images as it downloads the rest of the file.
(Get the pixel size from your image-processing software, such as Adobe
Photoshop.) For example, to include a self portrait image in a file along
with the portrait's dimensions, enter: NOTE: Some browsers use the HEIGHT
and WIDTH attributes to stretch or shrink an image to fit into the allotted
space when the image does not exactly match the attribute numbers. Not
all browser developers think stretching/shrinking is a good idea. So don't
plan on your readers having access to this feature. Check your dimensions
and use the correct ones. Aligning Images