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Posted by Stan McCann on 01/03/06 08:18
Jose <teacherjh@aol.nojunk.com> wrote in
news:dthuf.5360$nA2.4979@newssvr22.news.prodigy.net:
>> It' very easy to solve. Don't open windows for users. If users
>> want to open in new windows, they will learn how if they don't
>> already know.
>
> Suppose I want to tell users how to "trick click" if they want to
> open a new window. I have many pages where this would be useful,
> and I suppose I could (at the head of each) say something like
> "Trick click to open in a new window", where "trick click" is a link
> that gives instructions.
>
> Is there a good way, without unloading the existing page, to give
> these instructions (a paragraph of text)?
How many pages are you going to have that on? If one, no big deal in
the extra text required; if more, you surely aren't getting your
message across. If you need to give that simple of instruction many
times, I'd rethink either the instruction or the learning ability of
those I'm instructing.
--
Stan McCann "Uncle Pirate" http://stanmccann.us/pirate.html
Webmaster/Computer Center Manager, NMSU at Alamogordo
http://alamo.nmsu.edu/ There are 10 kinds of people.
Those that understand binary and those that don't.
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