<li><b>f/</b> (for "files") is the folder for any downloadable (or browsable) file you may upload.</li>
<li><b>site/</b> is the main folder containing all your website pages. Three are already there :
<ul>
- <li><i>404.php</i> : the 404 error page;
- <li><i>dl.php</i> : a script to download binary files;
- <li><i>home.php</i> : the specifications for the welcome page.
+ <li><i>404.php</i> : the 404 error page;</li>
+ <li><i>dl.php</i> : a script to download binary files;</li>
+ <li><i>home.php</i> : the specifications for the welcome page.</li>
</ul></li>
<li><b>.htaccess</b> : its main job consists in routing everything that is not a resource
to the index.php file.</li>
<li>A global title to your website; this title can later be mixed with a more specific
page-based title, or be replaced.</li>
<li>A list of references to CSS style sheets and pre-rendering javascript, like
- <code><link rel="stylesheet" href="http://cran.r-project.org/R.css"/></code>.
+ <code><link rel="stylesheet" href="http://cran.r-project.org/R.css"/></code>.
We will see later how to refer to local style sheets (under a/css).</li>
<li>Some javascript code which will be loaded by default after every page loads
(e.g. <a href="http://jquery.com/">jquery</a>).</li>
</ul>
<p>
- You can also change the \<meta\> tags if needed.
+ You can also change the <meta> tags if needed.
</p>
<h3>site/home.php</h3>
Now we will see how to access pages and resources (images, CSS, files, javascript).
</p>
-<hr>
+<hr/>
<h2>How to view a web page ?</h2>
Just use a regular link pointing to <code>r('dl/?f=name_of_the_file.xxx')</code>, anywhere you want.
</p>
-<hr>
+<hr/>
<h2>Usual workflow</h2>