PUB2000: Web Pages Appear Differently in Different Browsers (198260)
The information in this article applies to:
This article was previously published under Q198260 SUMMARY
Web pages created with Publisher may appear differently when you view them
using different Web browsers. When you view a Web page with Microsoft
Internet Explorer, for example, the page may appear differently than if you
viewed it with Netscape Navigator or Mosaic.
Here are some of the things that are likely to appear differently with
different browsers:
- Spacing between lines of text
- Text wrap and text alignment
- Placement of pictures
- Fonts, text size, and text color
- The background color of text frames
MORE INFORMATION
This issue actually affects all Web pages, not just those created with
Publisher. However, because Publisher supports some very complicated
layouts, the differences may be more obvious.
When you create a Web page, what you really get is a text-only document
that contains instructions that a Web browser uses to re-create a richly
formatted page. To keep these files as small as possible, the instructions
are generic. Different Web browsers interpret these instructions slightly
differently. For example, a Web page may instruct a Web browser to align
some text in a table with the top of its cell, but the exact distance
between the top of the table cell and the top of the text is left up to
the Web browser.
In addition, not every Web browser understands the same set of
instructions. Software companies frequently expand the features of their
browsers, then other companies add the same features later. If a Web
browser does not understand an instruction, it typically ignores it.
Finally, a Web page can contain instructions about what fonts the Web
browser should use, but it does not contain the fonts themselves. For
example, if you create a Web page that uses some text in the Rockwell
Condensed font, that text will appear differently on a computer that does
not have Rockwell Condensed installed.
These issues are not specific to Publisher; these issues occur with all Web
publishing tools and browsers.
If you do not know which Web browser your audience will be using, it is a
good idea to have several different browsers installed at the same time.
That way you can get several different opinions about how your Web page
should look before you actually post it to the World Wide Web.
If you do not want to have several Web browsers on one computer, you can
have Publisher post your Web Site to a floppy disk. You can then take the
floppy disk to several different computers that have different Web
browsers installed and view the Web Site on the floppy disk under each
browser.
To view a Web Site from a floppy disk using Internet Explorer, follow these
steps:
- Put the disk in the A: or B: floppy drive.
- Start Internet Explorer.
- On the File menu, click Open.
- In the Open dialog box, click Browse.
- Change to the A: or B: floppy drive.
- Click the file called Index.html, Index.htm, Default.html, or
Default.htm.
You should be able to follow a similar set of steps for other Web browsers.
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 6/29/1999 |
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Keywords: | kbinfo kbprb KB198260 |
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