About managing Web files and links

Microsoft Office Access 2003

Some of the content in this topic may not be applicable to some languages.

When you create Web pages, your Microsoft Office application manages the related files and inserts the links and hyperlinks so that the images appear and the links work when the pages are placed on the Web server.

ShowManaging links

When you create hyperlinks in your Office files, you have the option of making the links relative or absolute. In most cases, it's best to use relative links for any files that will be published on the same server - such as bullets, navigational buttons, background textures, graphics, and pages within the same Web. Using relative links makes it easier to move supporting files from one location to another

Hyperlinks to files on other Web servers, for example, a list of your favorite places on the Web, must be set up as absolute links.

If you use the Save as Web page option from an Office application to save your Web pages to a different server, any relative links to files that aren't being copied to the other server are converted to absolute links.

ShowManaging and naming supporting files

By default, when you save your file as a Web page, all supporting files— such as bullets, background textures, and graphics— are organized in a supporting folder. If you move or copy your Web page to another location, you must also move the supporting folder so that you maintain all links to your Web page.

For example, suppose you have a Web page named Page1.htm. It includes bullets, which are stored in a supporting folder named Page1_files. The relative paths for the image files are \Page1_files\image001.gif and \Page1_files\image002.gif. If you move Page1.htm, you must also move the supporting folder (Page1_files) to the new location.

By default, the name of the supporting folder is the name of the Web page plus an underscore (_), a period (.), or a hyphen (-), and the word "files." For some language versions of Office, the word "files" is translated. For example, suppose you use the Dutch language version of Office 2000 to save a file named Page1 as a Web page. The default name of the supporting folder would be Page1_bestanden.

ShowDefault names for Web page supporting folders

By default, when you save your file as a Web page, all supporting files— such as bullets, background textures, and graphics— are organized in a supporting folder. The name of the supporting folder is the name of the Web page plus an underscore (_), a period (.), or a hyphen (-), and the word "files." The word "files" will appear in the language of the version of Microsoft Office that was used to save the file as a Web page. For example, suppose you use the Dutch language version of Office to save a file named Page1 as a Web page. The default name of the supporting folder would be Page1_bestanden.

Note  If you save your Web page with a short file name (maximum of eight characters, plus a three-character file extension) by clearing the Use long file names whenever possible check box in the Web Options dialog box, the supporting folder is the name of the Web page without the word "files."

ShowThe default name for the Web page supporting folder in each language version of Office

LanguageDefault name for Web page
supporting folder
Arabic.files
Basque_fitxategiak
Brazilian_arquivos
Bulgarian.files
Catalan_fitxers
Chinese (Simplified).files
Chinese (Traditional).files
Croatian_datoteke
Czech_soubory
Danish-filer
Dutch_bestanden
English_files
Estonian_failid
Finnish_tiedostot
French_fichiers
German-Dateien
Greek.files
Hebrew.files
Hungarian_elemei
Italian-file
Japanese.files
Korean.files
Latvian_fails
Lithuanian_bylos
Norwegian-filer
Polish_pliki
Portuguese_ficheiros
Romanian.files
Russian.files
Serbian (Cyrillic).files
Serbian (Latin)_fajlovi
Slovakian.files
Slovenian_datoteke
Spanish_archivos
Swedish-filer
Thai.files
Turkish_dosyalar
Ukranian.files
Vietnamese.files

ShowTesting links

After you have published your Web pages to the Internet or an intranet, you should test them in a Web browser. Make sure that all the graphics are displayed and that hyperlinks go to the correct destinations.

ShowTip

You can save your file as a Single File Web Page (MHTML) file so that all the text and graphics are stored in a single file. You can then move or send the MHTML file as an e-mail attachment without worrying about broken links. You can view MHTML files with Internet Explorer 4.0 and later.