Hubert Figuiere wrote: >AbiWord is not in any way designed to create web pages. The HTML export is >just a helper to allow publishing documents to the web easily. But it is NOT >a substitute to web content publishing tools. Emacs (or vim) is much more >suited for that. > Sorry, but I don't think you see the idea I wanted to explain : use abiword to ease the web publishing process of *editors*. I don't want to use it to create html pages, but to let non technical users create content with an easy to use wysiwyg tool. The output of abiword (either xml or limited xhtml) would be included in the site using common templating technics / xml preprocessing, etc....
> And any well designed content for the web would involve >some sort of post-processing, like server side include (PHP or anything >else) or pre-processing of the file before putting online (static content >but with defined layout. You change the layout, you regenerate all the page >from content and layout template). > That's what I meant :) I see a use for abiword as a replacement for dumb text area in web browsers for non IT people posting content to their websites. >>Does this make sense? >> > >No. It does not. See above for the reason. > I still think it does, but probably I didn't explain clearly enough. Look at http://www.ektron.com/ewebeditpro.cfm?doc_id=1841 , for similar fucntionality. Here, instead of using java applets, we'd use abiword. philippe ----------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word unsubscribe in the message body.
