Sorry Mark, but I don't think you're correct.  Until very recently, they
only worked on IE.  Run the page on any other browser and you either get an
error, or a plain textarea form control.

And until the day before yesterday, there wasn't any I knew of that claimed
to have XHTML support.   Except one that claimed to have XHML support and
produced all upper case tags, and allowed <BR> to remain in the output.

And yes, Dreamweaver handles XHTML excellently.  You can load an old page
into it,  select "Convert to XHTML" on the file menu and bingo!  Valid
XHML1.0 Transitional.  A little tweaking and you have XHTML1.0Strict.


Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
.com,.net,.org domains from AUD$20/Year



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Mark Harwood
Sent: Thursday, 16 September 2004 9:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] WYSIWYG Editors


Olajide,

You question is a bit vage, any WYSIWYG editor will work on all 
browsers depending on the markup you input!

I think your asking "which offers the best XHTML & CSS" Support?

I wouldnt know, as i thrown on using them for XHTML & CSS coding,
But Dreamweaver MX 2004 is supose to handly XHTML & CSS very well
but its still down to how well the user implements the code as too
how X-browser compatible the output will be

Mark Harwood


******************************************************
The discussion list for  http://webstandardsgroup.org/

Proud presenters of Web Essentials 04 http://we04.com/
 Web standards, accessibility, inspiration, knowledge
To be held in Sydney, September 30 and October 1, 2004

 See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
 for some hints on posting to the list & getting help
******************************************************

Reply via email to