> not search engine friendly.
Frames are perfectly search engine friendly. Search engines have no
difficulty indexing your framed pages. THAT'S the problem. Since your
content frame is a separate page, it gets indexed as a separate page,
creating the possibility that you could find a content page with no
navigation page in the search results. They just aren't user friendly.
--
Murray --- ICQ 71997575
Adobe Community Expert
(If you *MUST* email me, don't LAUGH when you do so!)
==================
http://www.projectseven.com/go - DW FAQs, Tutorials & Resources
http://www.dwfaq.com - DW FAQs, Tutorials & Resources
==================
"domainsatretail" <webforumsuser@macromedia.com> wrote in message
news:gd4vqd$64s$1@forums.macromedia.com...
> Frames and iframes in my opinion should not be used unless they really
> need be.
> I do believe you are thinking about using Frames, which is the easiest
> way, but
> not search engine friendly.
>
> The new way you may want to research how to do this is with Div Layers
> that
> has some JavaScript code that changes the inner text when the button is
> clicked. Although, for doing it the easy way, frames works.
>