Also, there is Subethaedit. You want to go for the free version, but
ther itis. I likeit because I cando a web preview within the app
itself. and I can switch betweenthat and the code really quickly.
Makes offline coding easy.
Jane
On Mar 20, 2007, at 6:53 PM, Greg Kearney wrote:
Let em say this that if you set TextEdit to edit text only and not
RTF it is perfectly possible to edit HTML in it. It's just that
Smultron, it means Strawberry in Swedish in case you were
wondering, is so much better a tool to do this with.
TextEdit was designed primarily to deal with files coming in from
MSWord and to edit files being sent to MSWord users. I don't know
of any web developers that use MSWord or Word like tools to develop
web pages in Microsoft's advertisements not withstanding.
Greg Kearney
On Mar 20, 2007, at 16:44 , Gordon Smith wrote:
I'm going to have a look at all of these editors which people have
suggested. Smultron I've had a brief glance at, and it looks
promising. It still means I need to hand-code everything. But at
least I can see the code, and not just the links which TextEdit
displays. Honestly, what were Apple thinking of when they
designed that! Surely, the whole point of an editor is to ...
edit things! Thanks Greg and all for these suggestions.
On 20 Mar 2007, at 21:43, yvonne thomson wrote:
Just to add another quick note to this, subethaedit is also
accessible.
Admittedly, it's shareware, but it *is* an alternative, if for
some reason you're not happy with Smultron.
It's also got an interesting ability to let multiple people edit a
document at once.