What is a Front-Page?

The front page of a newspaper usually features the biggest news stories of the day. It usually has a big red masthead and eye-catching pictures. The front page also gives us a clue about the attitudes of the newspaper towards the news. For example, a tabloid paper will tend to focus on celebrity gossip and a more serious paper will place more emphasis on national and international politics.

A website can have a front page too. In fact, it’s the first page that a visitor will see when they enter a website. The layout of a front page can vary according to the screen size and the device used to access the site.

Front-page is a phrase that can be found in English, French, and German. There are several related words that mean the same thing as front-page, including:

A Web page that acts as a landing page or welcome mat for a site. It may contain a site map, links to key pages within the site, and a search box. The purpose is to greet visitors and direct them to content they are looking for.

Microsoft FrontPage (full name Microsoft Office FrontPage) was a WYSIWYG HTML editor and Web site creation tool that was included with the Microsoft Windows line of operating systems from 1997 to 2006. It required a set of server-side plugins originally known as IIS Extensions and renamed FrontPage Server Extensions, which provided functionality for remote Web publishing and authoring. Microsoft discontinued FrontPage in December 2006, and it was replaced by two products, Microsoft Expression Web and SharePoint Designer.