Hello,

It may be a good idea, IMHO, to include the official W3C HTML
editor/browser, amaya.

An overview is available on http://www.w3.org/Amaya/Amaya.html
The main URL is http://www.w3.org/Amaya/

"Amaya is a complete web browsing and authoring environment and comes
equipped with a WYSIWYG style of interface, similar to that of the most
popular commercial browsers. With such an interface, users do not need to
know the HTML or CSS languages."

I like its structured editor (you can have a tree view of your page, and
edit it in the tree). Like in Lyx, you can import a plain text file (or
type it plain), and format it very quickly and easily: click on a
paragraph, press "esc" to select the whole paragraph, then click on the
"H1" button and have it become a H1 header.

Table, images, image maps etc... are also easy to deal with.

You can easily use CSS and modify the document appearance, without any
prior knowledge of CSS, thanks to included documentation easy to find in
the "help" menu. (BTW, it's i18nalized).

A year ago it wasn't ready and had some widget problems (uses motif, I
think).

Now, I use it complementary with emacs and it's pretty useful to clean up
html code produced by less-than-compliant editors and get it html4.0
compliant (which greatly helps keeping a consistent appearance of your
pages through many browser, but subscribers of cooker mailing-list don't
need this kind of explanation, I guess :-).

It's available http://www.w3.org/Amaya/, and Daniel Veillard (
[EMAIL PROTECTED]) provides binary and soure RPMS.

--
St�phane Gourichon - Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6 - �quipe AnimatLab
"Bonjour, je suis un virus de signature de mail. Copiez moi dans votre
fichier signature pour que je me propage d�sormais avec vos mails. Merci."

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