• 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

    • Now I may not quite understand this, so someone tell me if I'm off the mark here, but does this mean they'll be potentially removing drivers for now unsupported systems, such as old processors and chipsets? In the past 15 years, Windows has been amazing at just installing on any device, and often having zero, or just a few unessential drivers missing on first install. It would be a shame for that experience to go, though I understand the reasoning, or at least their financial reasoning for it!
    • Microsoft is removing legacy drivers from Windows Update by Usama Jawad Last month, we learned that Microsoft is making major changes to the development of hardware drivers in Windows. This included the retirement of Windows Metadata and Internet Services (WMIS), along with the process for pre-production driver signing. Now, the Redmond tech firm has informed partners that it will be getting rid of old drivers in Windows Update. In what is being described as a "strategic" move to improve the security posture and compatibility of Windows, Microsoft has announced that it will be performing a cleanup of legacy drivers that are still being delivered through Windows Update. Right now, the first phase only targets drivers that already have modern replacements present in Windows Update. As a part of its cleanup process, Microsoft will expire legacy drivers so that it is not offered to any system. This expiration involves removing audience segments in the Hardware Development Center. Partners can still republish a driver that was deemed as legacy by Microsoft, but the firm may require a justification. Once the Redmond tech giant completes its first phase of this cleanup, it will give partners a six-month grace period to share any concerns. However, if no concerns are brought forward, the drivers will be permanently eradicated from Windows Update. Microsoft has emphasized that this will be a regular activity moving forward and while the current phase only targets legacy drivers with newer replacements, the next phases may expand the scope of this cleanup and remove other drivers too. That said, each time the company takes a step in this direction, it will inform partners so that there is transparency between both parties. Microsoft believes that this move will help improve the security posture of Windows and ensure that an optimized set of drivers is offered to end-users. The firm has asked partners to review their drivers in Hardware Program so that there are no unexpected surprises during this cleanup process.
    • No idea, but I had a client the other week that lost the entire drive to it. I suggested relying on the Samsung T7's instead. The Sandisk Extreme's had reliability issues too.
    • I use it every day so personally yes I need it, or rather I want it. I use OpenShell though, not the garbage modern Start Menu. I just counted and at the moment I have a total of 92 program shortcuts organized into six folders almost exactly the way I did back in Windows 95. I can get to any program I want to run very quickly. I never use Search to find or run programs.
    • I do miss the Apps view from Windows 8.1 Update.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      KynanSEIT earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      gowtham07 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Collaborator
      lethalman went up a rank
      Collaborator
    • Week One Done
      Wayne Robinson earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Karan Khanna earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      682
    2. 2
      ATLien_0
      274
    3. 3
      Michael Scrip
      220
    4. 4
      +FloatingFatMan
      171
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      160
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!