Got it?

DWMX is what DW has always been: an out-of-the-box web creation and
management solution or non-coders. It's more elegant than FP or the old
NetObjects but it is in the same class. In that market, file relating is
crucial -- it avoids the intimate knowledge of the site or application that
Mark wants. The process is automatic; as user proof as possible.

andy
-----Original Message-----
From: Vernon Viehe [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, May 06, 2002 5:03 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Macromedia Folks: What are you thinking?


I wanted to talk to some of our most seasoned CF'ers around here before I
got back with you on this. We stepped through what was necessary to set up
the RDS connection and edit files both in CF Studio and DWMX, and what the
fundemental differences are. We think we've boiled it down to a few relevant
differences.

1.) You must declare a local root folder:
Keep in mind, you don't have to d/l the whole site to this folder. In fact,
you can view files in the "remote" view so that you're looking at them live
on the server. When you double-click the file, it will appear to open
directly in DW (what actually happens is that DW d/l's the file to the local
folder you declared in the definition, if you chose "Edit files directly on
the testing server" in the site wizard, or chose "Automatically upload files
on save" in the regular definition box, DW will upload the file as soon as
you hit Save.) This is in effect the same as editing live on the server,
with the exception that you will have a local copy of whichever file you
edited, saved in a corresponding location in the local folder.

All in all, this doesn't seem to present any barriers to one's workflow,
it's just a different methodology whose results are pretty much the same in
both programs.

2. There is no option to use FTP/RDS in the save-as dialog box:
This means that to save & upload to another site/location other than the
site currently chosen, you have to first save it to the corresponding
location in the local root folder of that site, then switch to that site's
definition in the files window to "put" the file. This can require a few
extra steps which I can see being a pain if you need to save the same file
to several sites often.

Otherwise, if it's in the current site, then the option to Automatically
upload on save pretty much takes care of this.

If the FTP & RDS Explorer in the save as dialog is important to you, please
let us know by using the Feature Request and Bug Report form at:
http://www.macromedia.com/support/email/wishform?6213=6

I hope this helps!

Vernon Viehe
Community Manager
Macromedia, Inc.
Online diary: http://vvmx.blogspot.com/ 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Joshua Miller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Monday, May 06, 2002 8:57 AM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: Macromedia Folks: What are you thinking?
> 
> 
> Why did you remove basic use of FTP/RDS from Studio and 
> replace it with
> the Dreamweaver SITE function?
> 

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