IMAGE imgs/index01.gif IMAGE imgs/index01.gif

way to format an equation is to convert it to an image. See the Graphicscategory above for an explanation of how to force text to be converted to an image.

Accommodating Different Browser Settings

All browsers do not display text the same way. Terry Morse Myrmidon is designed to produce Web pages that look best when displayed with Netscape Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer with default settings on a Macintosh. Browsers on Windows computers often display larger text by default, making the Web page look different. A browser's base text size can also be changed, making the text appear either smaller or larger than in the original document.

Terry Morse Myrmidon tries to accommodate the widest range of browser settings by creating HTML that looks reasonable at different text size settings. This is accomplished in different ways, depending on the conversion setting for creating line breaks in Paragraphs:

1. Line breaks set to "always": The browser will widen the invisible table cells that contain the text as necessary to accommodate the larger text without changing the text wrapping. The overall appearance of the document will be similar, but the web page will be wider and probably taller than the original.

2. Line breaks set to "never": The widths of the table cells remain fixed, and the browser rewraps the text as necessary. The total width of the document will not change, but larger text settings can make the document much taller.

3. Line breaks set to some value other than "always" or "never": The widths of the table cells remain fixed, and the browser will wrap the text as necessary. The lines of text that contain line breaks or line spacing will contain "hard" line breaks, so the text will not wrap on those lines.