Best regards,
Marilyn Langfeld
http://www.langfeldesigns.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
+1.301.598.3300 business phone
+1.301.598.0532 fax
+1.202.390.8847 mobile
On Jan 10, 2005, at 4:24 AM, Johan Steenkamp wrote:
XStandard is very good - there is a freeware version.
For my money the commercial version is worth it and not expensive compared to others commercial XHTML editors.
Very easy to add custom mark-up to support styles and drag/drop image/file upload is neat.
Johan
----------------
www.assetnow.com
------------Original Message------------
From: "Wong Chin Shin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Date: Sat, Jan-8-2005 7:17 AM
Subject: RE: [WSG] XHTML complient in-browser Rich Text Editor.
1) HTMLArea RC3 - pretty darned powerful. suspect support. It's been at
RC3
since the stone ages and nothing much since then. I'm also not very
sure
about the validity of the output code since changing font families will
churn out <font> tags by default (didn't try to explore changing this
as I
moved to FCKEditor by then). Not easy to set up either.
2) FCKEditor - my choice right now. Support is pretty much a
single-handed
effort by the author but it's one of the most active projects on
sourceforge
right now. Visually very rich and it's one of the easiest to set up so
far.
One thing I love is the provision of plug-ins to the variety of
server-side
technologies like ASP, ASP.net, PHP etc.
3) TinyMCE - a little light on features, good to use if you're just
letting
users access to the basic stuff.
4) XStandard - commercial-ware so I didn't really evaluate it much. But
since it's supposed to be fully XHTML-compliant I guess there's
something to
be said for that.
5) http://www.intelimen.com.br/lib/editor/index.php - not evaluated yet
6) http://www.snippetmaster.com/index.php - not evaluated yet
7) http://kupu.oscom.org/ - not evaluated yet, from my first look it
seemed
really basic and slow.
8) http://sourceforge.net/projects/phpwebeditor - not evaluated yet
9) http://walter.sourceforge.net/ - not evaluated yet
One thing that you may want to watch out is whether they allow editing
of
individual table CELL attributes. No, not for more abuse of table-based
layouts but it does have its uses sometimes.
Wong
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Matt
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 7:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [WSG] XHTML complient in-browser Rich Text Editor.
Hi Everyone,
I am looking for a lean browser based text editor which creates valid
XHTML output.
Basically I would use a normal text area, but the site I am developing
requires the ability to add hyper links, paragraphs, and change the
text style.
I want something that will automatically run (i.e. I want to avoid
having the user manually install something)...
I have looked at xstandard (http://www.xstandard.com) and I'm pretty
impressed, but I found it to be really slow to load as it might be a
bit too rich on functionality for my needs...
Just wondered if anyone has any other recommendations for a nice simple
RTE???
Cheers,
Matt
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See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
for some hints on posting to the list & getting help
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