#title "The Glossary" The glossary is a simple lookup table. Each item has a name and a text value. When a page is rendered, any text inside "double-quotes" passes thru the glossary. If the term is defined, its associated text is substituted. It's an elegant approach to the problem that link validator software attempts to solve. By concentrating most or all of your links in the glossary, you can make a change in one place, rebuild your pages, and your links are cool. A glossary gives you the power to correct URLs in one place. It's easy to add URLs to the glossary by choosing a menu item from Netscape Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer. When you get to a place in your web travels that you want to refer to in your website, add it to the glossary by choosing the Add to Glossary command in the web browser's Scripts menu, which appears when Frontier is running. A dialog appears asking what you want to call the page. Enter a name and then click OK. From that point on, when you put the name in double-quotes, a hotlink to that page will be generated. You can edit the contents of the glossary by chosing the Glossary from the Open in Frontier sub-menu. Frontier comes to the front and the glossary table opens. Edit the text of this table as you would any text on a Macintosh. When you're finished making changes, press Command-S to save to disk. After you use it for a bit, it becomes a basic resource for website stuff, like the Bookmarks menu in a web browser, with the difference that you have a collection of usable pointers for your web content, not just for your web browsing. Glossary names are limited to 127 characters.