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When creating a framed page, why are my link targets displaying in the wrong frame?

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When creating a framed page, why are my link targets displaying in the wrong frame?

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The Frame element’s NAME attribute and the A element’s TARGET attribute are case-sensitive and must agree. If the FRAME tag has name=”window”, then the linking A tag must have target=”window” (and not target=”Window”) for the link target to be displayed in the named frame. Return to Top • After opening my HTML in my browser, why do I see the raw HTML code, and not the formatted page? If display of file extensions is turned off in Windows, saving an HTML file with Text Documents selected as the file type will result in saving a file with two file extensions (mypage.html.txt, for instance). When this file is opened in many browsers (but not in Internet Explorer), you will only see the raw codes, because it is being assumed it is a text file, not an HTML file. You also won’t be able access this page once it has been published to the Web, unless you add the hidden extension to the file name. There are two workarounds for this. The first, and best, is to turn on display of file extensions (

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