Hmm, that is interesting. I have never used DreamWeaver myself. I use
Eclipse because I do more coding and manual HTML than anything else. I
just tried a search in Eclipse, got a list but it wasn't exportable.

I have a program on my Mac called "Text Wrangler" it's free from
Bbedit.com (go to products then text wrangler). You can use it to search
a folder of documents for a string. It will output the results and then
you can highlight all the results and copy/paste them into another
document or possbily Excel, I don't know about the latter.

Thomas Deliduka
Director of Information Technology
Columbus Museum of Art
480 East Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215
ph 614/629-0345 fax 614/629-0950
thomas.deliduka at cmaohio.org
 
ART SPEAKS. JOIN THE CONVERSATION

-----Original Message-----
From: Oberoi, Shyam [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 10:05 AM
To: Thomas Deliduka
Subject: RE: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map - recommended
software?

Thomas,

That's exactly what we want to do - and up to this point we've actually
been using DreamWeaver 2004 to do it.  The problem is that we want to
produce reports (or at least output the search results) and our version
of Dreamweaver doesn't seem to have that capability.

If a newer version of DW can do this, we'd definitely be fine with
upgrading

Thanks

Shyam

Shyam Oberoi
Sr. Website Technology Manager
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
---------------------------------------------
shyam.oberoi at metmuseum.org
p. 212-650-2303
 

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Thomas Deliduka
Sent: Tuesday, October 07, 2008 9:11 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map -
recommendedsoftware?

I could be reading the e-mail wrong, but I would think you would simply
want to scan the source code.  For instance, if you have DreamWeaver or
even a coding application like Eclipse, you load the site up and then
use the search feature to search multiple files for the links you want.

If you don't have access to the source, you may be able to use google's
search using the "site:yourwebsite.com" prefix to your searches and see
if all those pages are crawled.

Thomas Deliduka
Director of Information Technology
Columbus Museum of Art
480 East Broad Street
Columbus, OH 43215
ph 614/629-0345 fax 614/629-0950
thomas.deliduka at cmaohio.org
 
ART SPEAKS. JOIN THE CONVERSATION

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Oberoi, Shyam
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2008 11:11 AM
To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
Subject: [MCN-L] Website content analysis / site map - recommended
software?

Wanted to put out a question to see what software other people might be
using to do content analysis of their websites.  For example, we would
like to be able to scan our entire site to identify all the links that
point to a particular store item (such as "Rembrandt, Self-Portrait
Poster"), or a particular category of items (such as "posters") - these
links can exist in multiple parts of the site: special exhibitions,
permanent collection, timeline, etc

 

Thanks in advance,

 

Shyam

 

Shyam Oberoi

Sr. Website Technology Manager

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

 

_______________________________________________
You are currently subscribed to mcn-l, the listserv of the Museum
Computer Network (http://www.mcn.edu)

To post to this list, send messages to: mcn-l at mcn.edu

To unsubscribe or change mcn-l delivery options visit:
http://toronto.mediatrope.com/mailman/listinfo/mcn-l
_______________________________________________
You are currently subscribed to mcn-l, the listserv of the Museum
Computer Network (http://www.mcn.edu)

To post to this list, send messages to: mcn-l at mcn.edu

To unsubscribe or change mcn-l delivery options visit:
http://toronto.mediatrope.com/mailman/listinfo/mcn-l


Reply via email to