Ben Rosenberg pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
* Randall R Schulz
[Apr 07. 2008 16:04]: On Monday 07 April 2008 09:29, Alex wrote:
Hello Linux folkz, Could somebody please advise based on personal experience, are there any good Linux compatible WYSIWYG HTML editors. ...
Thank you in advance for any hints or opinions, Nonetheless there are people (I guess) who do professional Web development work using things like Dream Weaver or In-Design (certainly Macromedia and Adobe want you to believe this), so you could also use one of these running on Windows under virtualization (VMware, Xen, etc.) on a Linux box. They're pretty pricey, though and you'd need a Windows license, too..
Actually, it's not just Adobe that wants people to believe that DW and InDesign are used a lot. They are in fact used by most big dev houses. My wife worked for several in our 10 years in the Bay Area. The thing is .. 99% of those were on Macs. :D
But your point is taken about knowing HTML and other web languages. The thing to do with DW is to have a code window open so you can see what's being written by the WYSIWYG editor .. but one would have to know the code to catch any weird stuff.
-ben
I usually use OpenOffice to generate the basic layout and then open the doc in vi and clean it up. I find it easier to delete a bunch of extra code then trying to write from scratch. But then I only create new pages occasionally. -- Ken Schneider SuSe since Version 5.2, June 1998 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org