Associating a Regular Stylesheet With a Project

When you want to use styles in your content, the stylesheet needs to be made available for the content in question. If you associate a stylesheet at the project level the styles will be available for the content in the project. If you specify a stylesheet at the project level and another at a target level, the stylesheet at the target takes precedence.

Note To learn more about setting a stylesheet at the file level and inheritance, see the Flare Desktop Help system.

Permission Required?

Editing content and project files is an activity available to users with the Author status. By default, users with Author status have the following permissions set:

  • If this is deselected, then viewing files in a read-only mode is allowed. On the left side of the page, the Files vertical three-dot menu is not available.

  • If this is deselected, the XHTML in the Code view is read-only.

    Editing code is regarded as a capability for an advanced user. If not done properly, the code can become malformed quickly. Administrators can prevent users from editing the code by deselecting the Edit Code permission.

For more information about permissions, see Setting User Permissions or Setting Team Permissions.

How to Associate a Regular Stylesheet With a Project

  1. On the left side of the Flare Online interface, click Projects.

  2. Select a project to open it.

  3. Click the Workspace tab at the top of the screen.

  4. From the left side of the page, click the project file (FLPRJ).

  5. In the editor, from the Stylesheet drop-down, select the name of the stylesheet, which is usually located under Resources > Stylesheets.

  6. Click Commit.

  7. In the Create New Commit dialog, enter a Commit Message.

  8. Click Commit. (Or click Cancel, to back out of the process.)