Note: these are general instructions for creating Web pages from word processing documents. In some courses, your instructor may require that you create Web pages from scratch using a HTML editor. Always follow the instructions provided in your specific course.

To create Web pages

What You Need

To turn your documents into Web pages, all you need you need is MS-Word 97, MS-Word 2000 (with the HTML filter installed), Word XP or Wordperfect 8+. If you do not have any of these word processors, you must use Netscape Composer (a simple HTML Editor that comes with the full Netscape Communicator download). Click here to skip to the Netscape instructions.

If you use Word 2000, DO NOT use the standard Word 2000 Save As...HTML feature to create Web Pages. This feature add lots of unnecessary code that can create make reading these files difficult for some browsers. To avoid this problem, you must download and install the Word 2000 HTML filter, available at the Microsoft Website:

http://office.microsoft.com/downloads/2000/Msohtmf2.aspx

Once the HTML filter is installed, you can convert your Word documents as 'clean' Web pages by first saving the file as a Word document, then using the following Menu commands: File -> Export To -> Compact HTML (see below)

If you have Word XP, click File -> Save or Save As. In the Save/Save As dialog window's Save as type: drop down box, select Web page, filtered.

General Steps

1. Compose your document as usual, allowing word wrap (do NOT hit Enter at the end of every line, only between paragraphs). If you document includes section headings, you can/should use Heading styles (Level 2, 3 and 4 should suffice). You can also use tables, as long as you keep them simple (avoid merged cells or tables within tables).

2. Unless required by the Style Guidelines enforced in your program or course (e.g., APA), try to avoid using the following (they do not translate well to HTML):

3. Save your document first as a regular Word/Wordperfect document.

4. After saving your document as a regular Word/Wordperfect document, save it again as a Web/HTML page:

5. When following the steps in #4 above, you will be asked to supply a filename. The filename will vary according to its contents, where your plan to upload it, and your instructor's directions. However, the following rules always apply to naming Web files:

5. To edit the Web page you created, it is best to return to the original file (Word or Word perfect document), make your changes there and resave it as a Web page using the procedures outlined in Step #4 above.

Separate Instructions If Your Word Processor Does Not Save Web Pages

If your word processor does not save pages in Web format, try the following (requires Netscape Composer, the Web page editor that comes with Netscape Communicator):

  1. Open your document in your word processor. Make sure the text formatting is simple, as described in Step #2, above
  2. Open Netscape Composer (a blank document window will appear)
  3. Switch back to your word processor and select ALL your text (usually Edit->Select All)
  4. While still in your word processor, select the Copy command (usually Edit->Copy)
  5. Switch back to Composer and paste your text into its document edit window (Edit->Paste)
  6. Use the Formatting Toolbar in Composer to make any needed changes in your Web page
  7. Save the file as an HTML document (File -> Save as... -> File type = HTML)