An editor would be able to gather information on style, to produce a better image as a result. This is because it alters their perception and view point, so they can then produce a different result because they know more about style an how to edit images and facts for style.
I'd suggest and editor like EditPad or NotePad++
You would need to know how CSS works on HTML. CSS can remove the original style and replace it with a newer/better one. When using CSS, make sure the layout looks like: <style> p{ color: ~; background: ~; } </style> _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ To edit text properties you need to know some attributes (such as, hight, width, alignment, color, and background). Then you need to know how to use the attributes. Color changes the font's color. Background, well that's easy. Make sure use use the element: <style></style> to make the attributes valid.
because it would be hard to write software using a duck. ducks make terrible input devices.
You would add style="position:fixed" to your tag to make the image move down the page as you scroll.
Microsoft Frontpage is a WYSIWYG editor that is designed to simplify the creation of webpages. The user puts the information into the editor and Frontpage creates the HTML needed to make it look like it is on the screen. [This is the Frontpage HTML files that are asked in the above question]. The user then uploads that HTML to their host to display the pages. This program makes it very easy for novice users to create web pages.
This might help: http://www.brothersoft.com/map-editor-9751.html
The editor-in-chief of Make magazine is Mark Frauenfelder. Previously he has worked as an editor for Wired and served as editor-in-chief of Wired Online.
The Stylebook is not a tool per-say. It is a guide to make known the intended Style for question wordings and answers.
The best guide would be the latest version of the Chicago Manual of Style. It is used by professional editors and publishers.
editor.
is the piece well organized overall
It depends on the style guide you are following. The Chicago Manual of Style is one of the most important style guides used in the publishing industry in the United States; according to it, the plural would be "Gonzaleses." To most people, this will be the most natural-sounding solution. However, if your ear prefers "Gonzales" for the plural (unchanged), then that is defensible, too. If you are writing formally, however, following the CMS might be a good idea.
No. Embark on a journey, or in a poetic style you might say; embarks the Passenger,
Make the title page per the information given in the APA Formatting & Style Guide at The OWL at Purdue (see related link).
You Can't
An editor reads through a manuscript, checking for accurate spelling, grammar and mechanics, word usage, style, clarity, and so on. A copyeditor focuses mainly on details of this sort and does not usually make substantive changes. A manuscript editor may get into structure, organization, logic, sense, and other big issues as well as the details that are checked in a line edit.
Sometimes they're wrong. It Depends on Your TV guide. It might make a mistake.