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Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Expression Web 3 in 24 Hours- P17

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Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Expression Web 3 in 24 Hours- P17: Morten Rand-Hendriksen is the owner and creative director of Pink & Yellow Media, a boutique-style design company providing digital media consulting and creations for individuals, businesses, and broadcast television. He was awarded the Microsoft MVP (Most Valuable Professional) Award for his work with Microsoft Expression in 2008. | 462 BONUS HOUR 25 Beyond the Basics Part 2 Building a Site with ASP.NET 3. If you look through the code of the Contact.aspx page you notice that there is nowhere to input the email address the email should be sent to. This information is stored in the Web.config file. Open the Web.config file and find the EmailTo attribute on line 11. Change the value to your email address. You can also change the default subject line if you want. 4. Save both pages. Summary As websites become more advanced and you start looking for added functionality ASP.NET gives you options that are far outside of the scope of straight HTML. With this server-side script language you can make highly advanced dynamic websites with increased interactivity and features that are sure to impress any client. ASP.NET is Microsoft s server-side scripting language and as such it is an integral part of Expression Web 3. But because it is a server-side script language it requires a whole new set of skills that reach far beyond the scope of this book. For this reason you were introduced to the Portfolio Starter Kit an ASP.NET-based website designed by Microsoft to give new designers a first look at ASP.NET and you used it to learn the basics of how these sites work. An ASP.NET site is different from everything you have encountered so far in this book because unlike the regular HTML and PHP pages and even those generated from a Dynamic Web Template the individual pages of an ASP.NET site exist only when a visitor opens them. In other words rather than stored on the server as individual fully programmed pages the contents of an ASP.NET site are stored in web forms files with the suffix .aspx and external data sources such as XML files. When the visitor opens one of these forms the browser and the server work together to put the contents of the form into the layout of the master page and look through the form to see whether other content should be sourced from external data sources. It all sounds complicated .

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