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. Online Writing
Strategies for Writing Hypertext

E-mail  |  Web pages  |  Netiquette  |  Privacy issues

Flowchart Example:


When you create your flow chart, by hand or with a computer application,
label each "page" with the subtopic to which that link will take your reader.
This flowchart will help you visualize how the parts of your site relate
to one another and your site as a whole.  How the different "pages"/links
relate to one another depend, of course, on what your topic is. Your site,
for example, could be a course page, with links to the syllabus and your
Web-based assignments for the course, a Web-based group project for a class,
or a personal Web site.  The "home page" is the introductory page
with the essential information that lets your reader know what to expect
when visiting your site. Some Web publishing programs, like Dreamweaver,
can create a site "map" to see the relationship of the different "pages"
in your site. Return to Strategies for Writing Hypertext.


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