I'm so glad I had time since I'm home sick-ish.Īnd, you are absolutely right, Scott. And it was for a business that a friend is involved with. They wanted it quickly and didn't want a rework. But all I could do is clean up the presentation, which meant working in the WordPress interface for all page edits and mods to the world's largest style sheet (which doesn't have line numbering or search function, thank you very much!). It's a business-to-business site but looked like a 5th grader's school project. Home page alone, all centered, all bold, all Arial, and the page only has 160 words on it, including the menu! There were 5 shades of blue text alone. It was a mess-16 different combinations of font size, color, and weight on the They are running a Google Adwords campaign and people are visiting the site but they aren't getting many results. Yeah, but.They want to keep it as it is (!), on WordPress. Ugh.īut I agree about the general lack of a need to print and the much better results to be had from pasting the code into Word, if need be. Remind me never to take on a project developed with Artisteer (and it was done by someone who sells their design services and creates themes for WordPress sites). Stylesheet so that I could make notes on it about my changes as I waded through an enormous mess, and I did it in Word so that I could shrink it from 94 pages down to 20. This site is only 12 pages, but it's a massive hodgepodge of absolutely positioned divs and inline styling (I guess 2,314 lines of CSS wasn't sufficient) and almost every bit of text is styled as one of 4 headings (then modified inline). The largest of the 5 style sheets is 2,314 lines long, generated by Artisteer's drag-and-drop interface! It's impossible to find what controls what. It displays fully, vertically, on a 20 " monitor.). There are 86 (!) Divs on the home page (Six would be sufficient-wrapper, header, menu, 2 columns, footer). I've been asked to clean up an existing WordPress site that was designed in Artisteer (shudder). Ha! I just had to do some of that today for the first time in years. "As an individual developer, I cannot conceive of any reason I would ever want to do so, but there you are. It is common courtesy to recognize those who have helped you, and it also makes it easier for visitors to find the resolution later. Please remember to "Mark as Answer" the responses that resolved your issue. Team environments (software reviews, etc.) where it might be needed. Personally, I can't imagine a circumstance in which I would print page source, but I can fancy certain corporate or BTW, the Header and Footer fields there are text fields, so you can add whatever you wantĮither that, or, since these are simply text files, open them in another editor which does support print codes and print them from there. Or other codes that you may find (such as those from IE) don't work, then the answer is that there are no other codes available for EW, and you must take what you get. For example, they refer to the contents of fields (Date and Title) which exist in the NTP Page Setup dialog, but which do not exist in the EW dialog. Of course, there is no guarantee whatsoever that those codes will be meaningful anywhere else. %f = full filename (fully qualified file name of printed document) %t = title (or document name if Title field left blank) %d = date (based on the format defined in the Date field) For example, this is the list of codes for NoteTab Pro: AFAIK, those codes are specific to the particular application, not universal (although applications may, of course, use similar codes because they make sense).
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