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Do you know how to protect certain pages so people can view them only if they have a password?

2006-12-15 23:32:22 · 8 answers · asked by BrilliantPomegranate 4 in Computers & Internet Programming & Design

8 answers

1)I use MS Frontpage and Notepad to make all my sites.
2) your web host will have that on their panel, if it is C panel it's easy

2006-12-15 23:36:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have used it but its not my tool of choice, being a developer.

Its true, knowing how to code is the best way to go. However, when I want to put a nail in a piece of wood I use a hammer.

I would only use something like word or front page for their WYSIWYG strength. This means you can get something up and running quickly. You can then review the source code and remove any unwanted or unnecessary 'padding'.

To protect pages, its best to use security on the server. To protect information then you need to be looking at something more sophisticated - a data driven solution maybe.

2006-12-16 06:16:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Ok - thats two questions ;-)

Firstly, if you're looking to create HTML then I'd suggest not using Microsoft Word. Use something like Adobe Dreamweaver or Microsoft Frontpage.

To password protect pages, it depends on the Web Server you are using. Apache is the most common, but some people use IIS.

http://www.hwg.org/lists/hwg-servers/passwords.html

2006-12-15 23:33:53 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

No. As an Intranet Administrator I would have to tell my users over and over again DO NOT USE WORD TO CREATE WEB PAGES. It creates so much bloated code that won't display properly on half the browsers and different screen resolutions.

2006-12-15 23:40:50 · answer #4 · answered by lucrx440.rm 3 · 0 0

Ya It is quite possible. Just make use of some session variables to ensure that if user is logged in or not. You can check this on Page Load of the particular page.

2006-12-15 23:35:42 · answer #5 · answered by ajay p 2 · 0 0

it truly is more beneficial thrilling sticking needles on your eyes than attempting to change the HTML produced by technique of Microsoft observe. study the necessary HTML and do it your self. it truly is rather no longer that perplexing. you'll waste more beneficial time wading by skill of the steaming pile of code that observe produces than it is going to take you to study it real. Microsoft could otherwise be ashamed that they ever positioned that potential into observe.

2016-11-26 22:27:14 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Too right Lucretia, I personally would say teh same about dreamweaver too, sure it's easy to use, but theres so much crap left in the html afterwars it's hardly worth it.
I use notepad to make my sites, it forces you to learn how to code ;)

2006-12-16 01:23:14 · answer #7 · answered by clarky303 4 · 0 0

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