Web EditorsPersonally for a web editor, I use Gedit, which is a very capable Linux based, open source text editor which has syntax highlighting for a variety of document formats, and executable file formats, such as javascript, bash, html, perl, xml, and other languages. I then use a variety of web browsers to view and test the resulting pages as I develop them. Here is a screen shot of this file in Gedit as I am editing it.
Microsoft FrontPage Express Free Download This free version of Front Page Express is a little behind the times in editing capabilities. The SeaMonkey® Project Seamonkey is a suite of internet applications which includes a very capable wysiwyg web editor called Composer. I personally use Composer to make many of the web pages that I publish. KompoZer This is a wysiwyg web editor. It purports to make web editing easy for anyone even with no knowledge of html. I've never tried it so your mileage may vary. Amaya Here is the publisher's description - "Using Amaya you can create Web pages and upload them onto a server. Authors can create a document from scratch, they can browse the web and find the information they need, copy and paste it to their pages, and create links to other Web sites. All this is done in a straightforward and simple manner, and actions are performed in a single consistent environment. Editing and browsing functions are integrated seamlessly in a single tool." I have this web editor/browser combination on my Ubuntu installation, and it doesn't render text sizes the same as my other editors or browsers, making the text very small. For that reason alone I don't use it. Trellian Web Page This is another wysiwyg web editor. It has a unique split view you can use to view your rendered page with the html source right below it. It includes image conversion tools. You can drag and drop elements of your page around, and the code updates to fix them in position. Like this page? Link to it from your own website; just copy/paste this HTML: |
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