• 0

easy WYSIWYG html editor?


Question

21 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I am going to de-recormend NetObjects, I personally think it is one of the worst HTML editors I have ever seen. You can't go wrong with Dreamweaver, Namo Web Editor or even FrontPage.

  • 0

Enhanced HTML 2002 The best WYSWYG there is around.

Full WYSWYG interface for quick and painless editing of your web pages

Built in FTP program to load your site onto the net.

Spell Checker and HTML reference

Use it in place of notepad too!

Programmer? Here's the text editor you have been waiting for.

http://www.ehtml.com/

  • 0

I've used Mozilla Composer, but I'm more of a straight-to-the-code kind of guy. I use Vim. [vim.org]

However, if you truly need a WYSIWYG editor then I recommend Dreamweaver MX 2004. [macromedia.com] The web guys at our firm use it with some degree of success, and they don't have very many complaints.

By the way, we develop internally for Gecko (the Mozilla browser and Mozilla Firefox rendering engine), and Dreamweaver MX 2004 supposedly makes this very easy with standards compliance right out-of-the-box. Of course, that's just what the web guys tell me.

  • 0

A lot of people have suggested Dreamweaver, but personally I dont like it that much. Its good in some aspects, like the half html half wysiwyg window, but I find the program annoying in other areas. Like how it will it auto resize tables on you without even you knowing until its too late and your whole layout is shot T_T.... thats why I went back to notepad.

  • 0
  norky said:
who cares if it has bloated code?  iit's not written for performance like a browser or something

Well, there are many of us out there who don't want to write bloated, proprietary microsoft type code. Front Page 2003 was altered because of the massive outcry from developers who said they did not want it either. Microsoft listened and Front Page 2003 as a result produces much cleaner code. Happy ending, all the way around. :)

If you have lots of visitors and use up lots of bandwidth, the cleaner and more efficient the code, the less you will have to pay for bandwidth.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • It's become a central place at my workplace. I use it for meetings, general chatting between employees, and the teams for storing of files to share between people at work. 
    • It's a Dell color laser printer. Back when Microsoft kept having these security flaws with the print spooler and recommending you disable it I just got in the habit of it, and I use it so rarely now I just leave it disabled in case another flaw pops up.
    • KDE makes progress toward full Wayland session restore in Plasma 6.5 by David Uzondu In the latest issue of This Week in Plasma, the development team, as usual, brings news of ongoing work for the desktop environment. While KDE continues to polish the recently released Plasma 6.4, work has already taken off on the next major version of Plasma, 6.5. A significant step forward is being made on Wayland session restoration; the xx-session-management-v1 restore protocol has been implemented in Qt 6.10, which means KDE applications and Plasma itself can soon start using it to finally bring proper session restore to Wayland. For more immediate user-facing changes in Plasma 6.5, the Welcome Center application now teaches you about the many available keyboard shortcuts, as well as "what the heck the 'Meta' key is." For those who frequently work remotely, Plasma's built-in RDP server now supports syncing clipboard text between the client and server. The clipboard also received another useful feature, letting you copy the QR code for an item, not just view it. The team is also addressing smaller usability issues across the desktop, including fixes that will land in point releases for Plasma 6.4. Spectacle, for example, will no longer show a ghostly semi-transparent version of its menus in screenshots. The New! badge, which was introduced in Plasma 6.4 is now easier to read with better colors. Other notable UI improvements include: A new button on the "missed notifications" pop-up that lets you view what you actually missed. The Networks widget is now much better at telling you what it is doing, like when it is "looking for wireless networks". Inertial scrolling with touchpads is now active in all QtQuick-based KDE software. As always, the KDE team spent the week squashing bugs across various versions of Plasma and related software. Plasma 6.4.1, which went live this Tuesday, addressed several crashes in the desktop portal implementations and patched the open/save dialog, where apps could insert extra UI elements in the wrong places. It also resolved a recent performance regression affecting some games and fixed a strange issue with drawing tablets where the pointer could disappear when two were connected in different modes. 6.4.1 tackled a particularly odd hardware-specific problem with Samsung Odyssey G5 monitors endlessly turning on and off because of a faulty DDC implementation. KDE responded by blacklisting the device. In addition to that, the update fixed an accessibility regression in Discover, corrected an issue where deleting a favorited app left behind a ghost item you couldn't un-favorite, and restored the Window List widget's ability to minimize windows. As for fixes planned for 6.4.2, here's the full list as outlined by the Plasma team: Fixed a case where System Settings' Flatpak App Permissions page could cause the whole app to crash. Fixed an issue that could sometimes cause Plasma to go back to sleep again right after waking up, when the "Sleep then hibernate" setting is in use. The appearance of text labels in Folder View pop-ups is once again correct. You're no longer erroneously prompted to authenticate for a Wireguard VPN whose credentials are already stored in KWallet, and the wallet is set up to automatically open at login. Fixed an issue in the KDE desktop portal's screenshot implementation that prevented the delay setting from taking effect. Missing app backends listed in Discover's Settings page once again show the correct names. The brightness level shown on System Settings' Display & Monitor page now matches the one shown in Plasma. Fixed an issue that caused the panel to have too much space in it until restarting Plasma if you stop displaying the date on a horizontally-laid-out Digital Clock widget. The older Plasma 6.3.6 fixed video stuttering on variable-refresh-rate screens and patched the Weather Report widget after Environment Canada changed its data format. You can check out the full update on the official KDE Blog.
    • I'm happy with my setup. I have a raid 1 two drive Synology setup that I backup with Time Machine to every so often. What is your setup at home? 
    • Enterprise support (ex. Premier Support) is a bit different cup of coffee. I am not saying it is great, but they have SLAs and I have received solution within hours and even patches within 3 days.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      TsunadeMama earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      shaheen earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Dedicated
      Cole Multipass earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Alexander 001 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      icecreamconesleeves earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      569
    2. 2
      ATLien_0
      187
    3. 3
      +FloatingFatMan
      184
    4. 4
      Skyfrog
      112
    5. 5
      Som
      108
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!