Kee Hinckley wrote:
>
> Emacs over WebDAV should work fine if you run something that supports
> WebDAV as a filesystem (e.g. OSX), but that's not going to help you
> much.
>
If you're running Linux, this looks like fun:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/dav
There's also kiwifs:
http://kiwi.stan
"Rob Bloodgood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> DW also speaks WEBDAV natively, but emacs does not.
Not natively, but there is a DAV mode for emacs, apparently fairly
new. From the Debian package:
Package: eldav
Priority: optional
Section: net
Installed-Size: 61
Maintainer: Fumitoshi UKAI <[EMAIL
At Thu, 14 Mar 2002 11:30:54 -0800,
Rob Bloodgood wrote:
> DW also speaks WEBDAV natively, but emacs does not. Emacs speaks CVS
Eldav: Yet another WebDAV interface for Emacsen
http://www.gohome.org/eldav/
--
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> At 11:30 AM -0800 3/14/02, Rob Bloodgood wrote:
> >The problem is, concurrency. Dreamweaver has versioning built
> >in... but emacs has no way to recognize it. So when I make a fix
> >to a file, if the designers aren't explicitly instructed to >
> >refresh-from-the-website-via-ftp, my changes
At 11:30 AM -0800 3/14/02, Rob Bloodgood wrote:
>The problem is, concurrency. Dreamweaver has versioning built in... but
>emacs has no way to recognize it. So when I make a fix to a file, if the
>designers aren't explicitly instructed to refresh-from-the-website-via-ftp,
>my changes get hosed.
Quoting Rob Bloodgood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [Mar 14, 2002 14:30]:
> I've been trying, in various attempts over the past two years,
> to come up with a compromise between the two. The closest I've
> come was somebody mentioned a CVS emulation layer over a DAV
> repository... but that never came to f
I'm running a Mason based website, and I use Emacs when I write code.
My web designers use Dreamweaver. I've designed the site so that my web
guys have to reserve me one table cell (or more than one depending on where
in the site, but you get the point) where I put a single dispatch component
to