Raffaele Morelli wrote:
>>> I friend of mine wants to run Dreamweaver, and I suggested wine. However >>> he had some problems (which I don't remember, and my friend is not here >>> right now). He runs Debian Unstable. >>> >> This friend knows that Dreamweaver does *not* produce web-suitable HTML, >> right? (If it doesn't pass http://validator.w3.org/, it's not >> web-suitable). >> >> (And are you really his friend for not suggesting something better than >> Dreamweaver?) >> > > Please suggest something that would fit the bill, rather than just > saying "don't do that."(Did not follow this thread completely)Quanta suite is a great web-dev tool. It produces web-suitable html,xhtml (transitional,strict,basic), xml, wml ... according to the project DTD definition settings.It comes with several plugin which makes web-dev life quite easy e.g for php developers among others, such vars completion full control, syntax and php-function highlighting and arguments reminder.Stylesheets are also easy to implement. It's really worth to have a look. cheers raffaele
HTML editors I know of: NVU - based off Mozilla composer, allows several alternate views, including a "WYSIWYG" view/edit mode. bluefish Quanta+ screem - these are all (so far as I can determine, with a quick and cursory overview) direct HTML/... editors. They provide 'quick' creation modes, with buttons to create common elements (opening/closing tags, etc.) but do not provide a WYSIWYG editing feature. You create the page and then use an external browser to view and evaluate it. OOo - OpenOffice provides an HTML editor, which is WYSIWYG.
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