computer Assignment about Microsoft Word

aandc3
computer.docx

Web Page Project Instructions

Included in this zip file are two documents: this one that you are reading right now and a picture of some flowers.

Use Windows Notepad, Mac Textedit, or Chromebook for this exercise. Chromebook prefers that you use Google Docs on your drive.google.com account. If you prefer you can use this approach in Windows or Mac as well.

Create a single web page with the following features

· Four single lines of text in 4 different heading styles (choose from <h1> to <h6> styles). Make each heading style a different color. Example: <h3 style="color:blue">

· Two paragraphs of text (marked by <p> and </p> tags). Use two different colors (other than black) for the text in the two paragraphs. This will require a ‘style’ attribute. Example: <p style="color:green">

· Boldface one single word in one of the paragraphs (<b> and </b> tags needed).

· Italicize one single word in one of the paragraphs (<i> and </i> tags needed).

· An unordered list (bulleted list) of at least 3 items <ul> <li> </li> … </ul> tags needed

· An ordered list (numbered list) of at least 3 items <ol> <li> </li> … </ol> tags needed

· A JPG image <img src=”name of image file goes here between the quotes” alt=”alternate text goes here”> -- note: <img> does not have a closing tag

· Add width and height attributes to the image (after alt text insert: style=”width:NNNpx;height:NNNpx;” inside of <img> tag, where NNN are nums of your choosing Example: <img src=”flowers.jpg” alt=”Flowers, Longwood Gardens” style=”width:150px;height:100px;”>

· A working link to an external web site: <a href=”exact url of web site goes here between the quotes”> Link text goes here </a>

Getting the file ready to submit to the Moodle drop box

Windows. Save the document as an HTML file. For Windows Notepad this means changing the ‘Save as type’ setting from TXT (its default) to ‘All files’ and then manually adding ‘html’ as the file extension. So, for example, if you were going to save the file as ‘Some_Tags’, you would actually type: ‘Some_Tags.html’. Submit the HTML file to the drop box in the normal way.

Mac. TextEdit on a Mac will automatically add an ‘.rtf’ extension to whatever file name you give your web page. You will have to manually remove the ‘.rtf’ extension afterwards so that only the ‘.html’ extension remains. Submit the HTML file to the drop box in the normal way.

Chromebook wants you to work in your drive.google.com account. (This way of working works in Windows and Mac as well). Use Google Docs to create the web page. Although it automatically saves with a DOCX extension, you can File > Download it as a TXT file. Once it’s on your machine you can change the extension from TXT to HTML. Submit the HTML file to the drop box in the normal way.

Extra note for Chromebook users. There’s also this link to download a simple dedicated web page editor named Caret specifically for Chromebooks:

https://www.google.com/search?q=creating+basic+html+files+with+chromebook&rlz=1C1CHZL_enUS748US748&oq=creating+basic+html+files+with+chromebook&aqs=chrome..69i57j33.10836j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#kpvalbx=_Wj2gX72OH-bB_QaG7q74Dg12