Brief Summary
This beginner-level course guides you through Dreamweaver Creative Cloud, making website design easy and fun! With clear instructions and a friendly pace, you'll learn to build and manage your first website, complete with text, images, and links. Perfect for newbies!
Key Points
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Beginner-friendly course for Dreamweaver Creative Cloud (CC)
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Learn to design your first website in a relaxed way
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Create web pages with text, images, and hyperlinks
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Customize design and content easily
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Contains exercise files and a certificate of completion
Learning Outcomes
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Understand the Dreamweaver interface and workspace
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Create and publish your first web page
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Add hyperlinks and customize page content
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Preview your web pages before going live
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Gain confidence in basic web design skills
About This Course
A beginner level course for those new to Dreamweaver Creative Cloud (CC)
In the 12-hour Learn Dreamweaver Creative Cloud (CC) video training course, you will discover how to easily and quickly design your first website using this popular web development software.
Your professional trainer will teach you the basics of creating a web page that includes text, images, and hyperlinks.
Learn how to customize the design and content of your web pages. You’ll also find out how to use essential features in Dreamweaver such as previewing your pages before they are published, and designing for multiple screens.
The comprehensive course continues with tutorials discussing how to publish and manage your website, and practical tips for quickly editing your pages before they are published.
This beginner level course is intended for those who are just being introduced to Dreamweaver and website design. It’s taught at a casual pace so that learners have plenty of time to absorb the information.
This course includes:
Exercise files
An optional quiz to test what you’ve learned
Certificate of completion
IMPORTANT: This course is for absolute beginners. If you're looking for a fast paced course, consider another course.
What people are saying:
“With any course that hasn't been updated in a couple of years, there were some parts that were no longer relevant to CC now - fluid grid layouts being one tool that has been replaced in Dreamweaver CC 2017. I would definitely take another course with this instructor.” -Jan Beasley
“I've taken 21% of the course, and so far, it has been fantastic. Admittedly, I am new to website building and know very little about coding and even less about css. I thought I would hate css, but the instructor is fantastic. He explains things in a clear-cut, concise manner. I am building a website for my church and took the job as webmaster. The old static site will soon be gone and a new, up-to-date, ‘live’ website will take its place. I can't wait to learn more!” –Dan Booth
“Very good; rate of instruction excellent; many pauses to illustrate potential destructive choices; very good and this is my fourth webinar.” -Walter Warren
Get started with Dreamweaver by navigating the interface and workspace.
Creating your first web page.
Adding hyperlinks to your pages.
David J.
The version of Dreamweaver used is outdated, so I had to look elsewhere to figure out how to navigate the user interface. It was still fine until I got to Section 14, where the instructor has us use a template that doesn't exist in my version of Dreamweaver. I tried to use the openingtimes.html doc. in the class files, but that didn't work either. The doc was already altered, so I couldn't follow along to make the changes that were being displayed in the video lesson. The instructor does a good job explaining his lesson, but so many things don't match in the files & user interface that I spent more time looking online to find updated methods to do anything. Would recommend waiting until Simon Sez makes an updated course with updated course files.
Edit.
After being instructed to upload a template that wasn't in my version of Dreamweaver, I went off to learn how to create the template from scratch. At that point, I mostly didn't need the lesson anymore. But that still presented complications trying to follow along with the lesson. Complications that I likely could've avoided if the instructor hadn't tried to use a template to teach CSS Designer as apposed to teaching as he went, similar to how he did with HTML. I'm going to try my best to finish the rest of this course, but it'll be my last for Simon Sez.