I agree. Also there is NO "easy to use" html editor. If you need something to do the html stuff for you stick with windows programs....dreamweaver or frontpage. In Linux there is nothing easy, as per your version of easy. Rob
>> -----Original Message----- >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Kaj Haulrich >> Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2003 11:05 AM >> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> Subject: Re: [newbie] easy to use HTML editor? >> >> >> On Tuesday 11 February 2003 03:50 pm, et wrote: >> > On Tuesday 11 February 2003 10:31 am, Angus Auld wrote: >> > > Greetings, I would like to ask the list for >> > > recommendations on an "easy to use" HTML editor. >> > > >> > > One that is designed for beginners and is user >> > > friendly. I have Bluefish, and also Screem and Quanta >> > > Plus, but they don't appear to be oriented toward the >> > > inexperienced user. >> > > >> > > TIA for any feedback on this. >> > > >> > > Best regards to all. >> > > >> > > >> > > --Angus >> > > >> > > "Let us not look back in anger or forward in fear, but >> > > around in awareness."--James Thurber >> > > >> > > *********************************************** >> > > *Reg. Linux User #278931* >> > > *********************************************** >> > > *Power by Mandrake Linux 9.0* >> > > *********************************************** >> > >> > I love this thread... >> > I suggest jed, kate, joe, nedit, emac or vim, and do it >> > by hand so you know how to fix what ever your wsiwyg >> > editor screws up. if you can't read the html produced, >> > how can you fix it? >> > and >> > how come, if there is time to go back over it and fix it >> > correctly later, how come there is not enough time to do >> > it correct the first time? >> >> I agree completely. However, a completely newbie to html >> might find it a bit hard to produce something in a hurry >> using only a text-editor. Using - for example - Mozilla >> Composer gets you running. That doesn't exclude reviewing >> the code in a text editor and doing a tidying-up job. >> >> And, finally, in Konqueror there's a nifty little gadget >> that lets you validate the code at W3C. >> >> So : try Mozilla Composer. Validate the code at W3C and >> study the errors you get from there. >> >> HTH >> >> Kaj Haulrich. >> =========================================== >> Powered by Linux - Mandrake 9.0 >> Registered Linux user # 214073 at http://counter.li.org >> Source : my 100 % Microsoft-free personal computer. >> =========================================== >> >>
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