The publish feature of the Netscape editor enables you
to store your web page and all its associated graphics in one
step to a remote server (MUSIC system). With this feature you
don't have to worry about remembering all the names of your gifs
when transferring files to MUSIC, or details about which transfer
options to use.
New Document edit a new web page Edit Document edit the currently displayed page Open file in Editor edit a page at another location
If the page you are editing is on a remote server (not a PC file), you will be prompted to save a copy on your PC. A dialog box will appear indicating that links and images will be adjusted and saved with your PC file. While you are editing you are not affecting the original Web page.
When you have finished your editing choose the Publish option from the file menu of the Netscape editor. A dialog box (shown below) will ask you where to store the web page and all it's associated files (gifs, etc).
The dialog box includes fields for your user name
(MUSIC userid) and password. The publishing location must include
an address that you're privileged to access (anything under your
own userid is acceptable, of course).
Note: All HTML files must be stored in a subdirectory
called HTTP on MUSIC. If you will be storing several Web pages
under your userid you may want to create additional subdirectories.
For a Web page that has many files (gifs, for example) associated
with it, a separate directory keeps all the elements of a particular
Web page together.