Initially, the only elements that appear in the Element Catalog are the elements that can be inserted into the area in which the cursor is currently placed. If you want to view all elements for the document, click Options located at the bottom of the Element Catalog. The Set Available Elements dialog box appears. Select All Elements, and then click Set. All elements for the current document are displayed in the Element Catalog. Displaying Element Boundaries as Tags To display element tags: Place your cursor within the structured document. Select View > Element Boundaries (as Tags). The element tags appear in the document window. Place your cursor within various parts of the document. Notice that the list of valid elements within the Element Catalog change according to the location of your cursor. These elements are indicated by a check mark. Inserting Elements and Attributes When you place your cursor within the tags of a structured document, the list of valid elements change. These elements are displayed with a check mark within the Element Catalog.
Hi, I don't know if there's much interest in this, but I was curious about what Application Lifecycle Management and the technology stack look like at Jagex. I grew up playing the game as a teenager, and now that I'm an adult working in the software industry I'm pretty interested in this side of things. The 'technology stack' is the mix of software and hardware, from end to end, used to deliver the Runescape game to its players. This would include everything from database servers (which store player data), to game servers, to web services (e. g. : there might be a web service that provides raw high score information). There's an article that does a brilliant job of outlining the technologies underpinning Stack Overflow. It can be found by googling Nick Craver's blog entry on Stack Overflow's architecture (2016 edition). Is there an article like this for Runescape? When it comes to Application Lifecycle Management, I'm talking about the overall process from development, through to change and release management, through to orchestration of the software deployment to however many servers.