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What is a page?

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What is a page?

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Generally what fits on the viewable area of a web browser (a computer monitor) in terms of width. The length of your web pages is also important. It is best to try to keep pages under 3 page lengths long and if necessary split the page into 2 or more pages. In terms of content, a balance of animation, graphical elements, photographs and text is required in order to convey the right message to your customers and prospects and ensure that the website is easy to use and performs well. There are no hard and fast rules, but by providing us with a list (if possible) of websites that you like and believe are close to what you are trying to achieve, makes it a straight forward process for us to understand your requirements in more detail. Alternatively, if there is nothing that you have come across yet that you like, or is close but not quite there, then our web designers have the experience to close this gap to your satisfaction.

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All Web sites are a collection of electronic “pages.” Each Web page is a document formatted in HTML that contains text, images or media objects. The “home page” is typically a visitor’s first point of entry.

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Turn to page 1 of any book. Then turn the page. The back of page 1 is page 2. Then comes page 3, and the back of page 3 is page 4, and so on. Odd-numbered pages are always on the right, and even-numbered pages are always on the left. I know this seems so obvious, but counting pages is one of the single most misunderstood simple things in printing. Self Publishing has received its share of manuscripts with the pages numbered 1F and 1B (1Front and 1Back), 2F and 2B, and so on—instead of 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. And yet, have any of us ever seen a book in print with pages numbered 1F, 1B, 2F, 2B, 3F, 3B, etc.? Could it be mind-numbing x-rays emanating from the copy machines at Kinko’s which are causing this confusion? Remember that every page counts as a page whether it is blank or part of the text—numbered or not.

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