The slogan of the Missing Manual series is “The book that should have been in the box” and Dreamweaver MX 2004: The Missing Manual lives up to the series’ reputation. Macromedia wouldn’t want to ship this book with the software because it’s a doorstop at 800 pages. Imagine what it would do to the packaging and the pricing of the already expensive software.
One itsy bitsy negative, but this book is not the only one avoiding it. Dreamweaver’s help file doesn’t cover it and neither does the forum on Macromedia’s Web site. There is a feature called download stats listing the size of the file and the time it would take to download it. At what speed? 56k? T1? What? I would assume 56k, but assumptions are not reliable.
At 800 pages, you can expect all the features to be covered through step-by-step instructions, notes, and screen shots. The hard core stuff like building dynamic Web pages, working with databases, and using server programming within Dreamweaver are all there for those ready for a challenge.
McFarland goes the extra mile to note differences between computer systems (Mac vs. PCs) and browsers (compatibility). Looking at the table of contents is proof of the book’s completeness and all I need to do is attest to its readability. First timers to creating a Web site or to Dreamweaver as well as owners of earlier versions will gain plenty of knowledge from this one.
VITAL STATISTICS:
TITLE: Dreamweaver MX 2004: The Missing Manual
AUTHOR: David Sawyer McFarland
PUBLISHER: Pogue Press LLC
PUBLICATION DATE: February 2004
ISBN: 0596006314
FORMAT: Paperback
PAGES: 800
PRICE: US$34.95

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