The first step in learning Dreamweaver is getting comfortable with the interface.
"I need a website," Elias had grumbled to his nephew, Kai, over dinner.
Open Dreamweaver, choose a starter template, and build something amazing today.
You can sync your phone or tablet to your computer and see how your site looks on a real device as you edit it in real-time.
For three days, Elias lived in the Split View. He stopped trying to "draw" the website and started building it. He learned that a <div> was a container, like a frame for a painting. He learned that CSS was the paint, and HTML was the canvas.
Located at the bottom, this tool lets you change attributes of selected elements (like links or image alt-text) without typing a single line of code. 3. Mastering the Fundamentals: HTML & CSS
Unlike a simple text editor (like Notepad) or a purely visual builder, Dreamweaver offers a "What You See Is What You Get" (WYSIWYG) interface alongside a robust code editor. This makes it perfect for: