I go along with John (Francis) here : I use Visual Studio too, and you can
get a free version in Visual Studio Express from the Microsoft web site.
The really good thing is the IDE is drag-and-drop, so it's really easy to
design pages visually, all of the tools you need are available, and you can
switch to the source code immediately within the IDE if there is a problem
with the automatic coding.
Give it a try Christine, you might well even enjoy it!

John in Brisbane

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John
Francis
Sent: Saturday, 4 July 2009 2:20 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Way OT @ $#*<h1>woman throws in towel on writing code</h1>*#$@

On Fri, Jul 03, 2009 at 11:48:14AM -0400, Doug Franklin wrote:
> John Whittingham wrote:
>
>> [...] 90% of all the [HTML] code writers I know use some form of
>> application other than notepad, it's just easier and quicker that way.
>
> Yeah, emacs. :-)

Or, in my case, vi (it may suck as an editor, but at least it sucks
uniformly across just about every machine I've ever had to work on).

Of late, though, I must admit that I've often been using the editor
that comes built in to Microsoft Visual Studio - it's nice to have
something that takes care of tag nesting and the like automatically.


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