A knowledged (X)HTML/CSS expert would use the following simple markup:
Code:
<p>The following is an example streaming video.
It's easy to embed your own YouTube videos, or any of
the tens of thousands of third party 'web widgets'
using the Placeholder feature. Most web widgets provide
a short snippet of HTML that you can attach to a graphic.
So the following rectangle acts as a placeholder for the
streaming video. To see the actual HTML snippet used,
open the Web Properties dialog and look at the Placeholder
tab.</p>
But, no you're on your WYSIWYG absolute position trip, don't care about semantic HTML and prefer to export a tag soup par excellence:
Code:
<div style=" font-size: 12px; font-weight: normal;">
<div class="tl" style="left: 0px; top: 5px;">The following is an example streaming video. It’s easy to embed your own YouTube videos, or any of the tens of thousands </div>
<div class="tl" style="left: 0px; top: 22px;">of third party ‘web widgets’ using the Placeholder feature. Most web widgets provide a short snippet of HTML that you </div>
<div class="tl" style="left: 0px; top: 39px;">can attach to a graphic. So the following rectangle acts as a placeholder for the streaming video. To see the actual HTML </div>
<div class="tl" style="left: 0px; top: 56px;">snippet used, open the Web Properties dialog and look at the Placeholder tab.</div>
</div>
The problem is, you're lost in the idea to export a page the same as it's shown on Xara's canvas (the so often discussed WYSIWYG principle).
Remi
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