On Tuesday 08 July 2008 05:18:29 am John Beardmore wrote: > Sorry to post off topic ! > > I've been asked to recommend some tools for secondary school > e-media teaching. > > So far I've suggested Gimp, Inkscape and Scribus with a side order > of Freemind. > > They would however like some simple web tools that a school might > use under Windows, Linux, and possibly on Macs. We don't want > content management or sophisticated AJAX IDEs, just something > simple for children to make reasonably modern html. What might be > out there ? > > > Many thanks, J/.
I work in html itself so that the Vim editor, which does syntax highlighting for many computer languages (about 100) does well. Bluefish is another editor with a stronger emphasis on html. Amaya is a more complete html tool that ensures standards-compliant results. All these are available on all three major platforms, although as usual Linux is the more friendly environment for Open source products. Quanta Plus is another and Linux-only html development tool. It is closely integrated with the KDE desktop, a common GUI on Linux machines. It aims to beat all the competition, including Dreamweaver. IMO web design used to be simpler when html was the only consideration. It has become more complex and files more verbose with the addition of CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) and XHTML encoding. With the new approach you really have to learn two languages, html and CSS, and maintain two files, the web page proper and the CSS sheet. My sites are still crafted the easy way in straight html. But I have books on the other approach which I read during commercial breaks. -- John Culleton Resources for every author and publisher: http://wexfordpress.com/tex/shortlist.pdf http://wexfordpress.com/tex/packagers.pdf http://www.creativemindspress.com/newbiefaq.htm http://www.gropenassoc.com/TopLevelPages/reference%20desk.htm
