Help and Support
 

powered byLive Search

FP98: What are Page Banners?

Retired KB ArticleThis article was written about products for which Microsoft no longer offers support. Therefore, this article is offered "as is" and will no longer be updated.
Article ID:174421
Last Review:December 1, 2000
Revision:1.0
This article was previously published under Q174421
On This Page

SUMMARY

This article describes what FrontPage 98 page banners are and how they work with themes.

Back to the top

MORE INFORMATION

A page banner is a FrontPage component that usually appears at the top of each page in a Web site. It can be used to display the title of the page using either text or image elements. A page banner can be used with or without themes or shared borders.

When you add a page banner to a HyperText Markup Language (HTML) page, the title of the page is inserted at the insertion point. If you change the title of the page in Navigation view, the page banner will dynamically update to reflect the new title. If you use a page banner in a Web that does not use themes, the page banner will display the title of the page as text only.

Back to the top

Page Banners and Themes

When using themes, you can use either text or images for the page banner. If you select an image, the page banner will acquire the image of the selected theme and write the page title into that image. If you change the title of the page, the page banner will update the image to the new page title. If you click Text in the Page Banner Properties dialog box, the banner will appear only as text.

Back to the top

REFERENCES

For more information about the page banners, click the Index tab in FrontPage Help, and type the following text:
Page Banner
and then double-click the selected text to go to the "Page Banners Properties Dialog Box" topic.

Back to the top


APPLIES TO
Microsoft FrontPage 98 Standard Edition

Back to the top

Keywords: 
kbinfo KB174421

Back to the top

Article Translations

 

Other Support Options

  • Need More Help?
    Contact a Support professional by E-mail, Online or Phone.
  • Customer Service
    For non-technical assistance with product purchases, subscriptions, online services, events, training courses, corporate sales, piracy issues, and more.
  • Newsgroups
    Pose a question to other users. Discussion groups and Forums about specific Microsoft products, technologies, and services.