Navigating In Www - Nokia 9000 User Manual

Communicator
Hide thumbs Also See for 9000:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

inet.frm Page 10 Wednesday, January 15, 1997 12:46 PM
7-10
After the WWW page has been fetched, the fol-
lowing commands are available (see figure 7-6):
Go activates the WWW navigation commands,
see "Navigating in WWW".
Save activates a new set of commands:
Copy text copies the text on the opened page
into the Downloaded files folder. Possible text
formattings are retained in the copy.
Add to hotlist adds on the Hotlist a link
pointing to this WWW page.
Copy HTML saves the HTML code of the cur-
rently opened WWW page into the Down-
loaded files folder and adds on the hotlist a
link pointing to this WWW page. See "Locally
stored WWW pages".
Back returns the previous set of commands.
Off line ends the data call and disconnects from
the Internet. You may use this function, for ex-
ample, to read the copied text off line. The copied
text can be read or edited normally, as described
in chapter 8 "Notes: Editing". When you press Off
line, or the communicator autodisconnects from
the Internet (see "WWW settings"), this com-
mand changes to On line. To reconnect to the In-
ternet, press On line. While you are off line,
commands Fetch, Fetch image or Previous, or
other applications may also return you to on line.

Navigating in WWW

If there are hyperlinks or hot spots in the part of
the WWW document shown in the application
Figure 7-6
Close returns to the Hotlist.
Locally stored WWW pages
You can store fetched WWW pages locally, on
your communicator. When you press Copy
HTML, the current WWW page is stored in the
Downloaded files folder and a link pointing to
this WWW page is added on the hotlist. Locally
stored WWW pages are marked by
Hotlist. If you want to view or edit the HTML
code of the saved WWW page, open the docu-
ment in the Note editor (in the Notes applica-
tion). If you want to view the document as it
would appear in the World Wide Web, open the
document in the WWW browser (in the WWW
application). A locally stored WWW page is
opened in the WWW browser by using the prefix
"file:///" (note: three slashes) instead of "http://"
(two slashes).
A fetched WWW document may contain an SMS
form. You can send the contents of an SMS form
as a short message. However, before you can
send the short message, you have to first save
the SMS form with the Copy HTML command.
window, one will always be selected (see figure
7-7).
Navigating in WWW
in the

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents