HTML EDITORS

http://www.barebones.com/

Bare Bones Software, publishers of BBEdit text editing software for Macintosh. Suzanne Stephens

 

http://www.claris.com/products/claris/clarispage/clarispage.html

Claris Home Page. [Editor’s note: Claris Home Page is a favorite of Joe Gillespie, one of the kind hosts of this list. Both Claris Home Page and BBEdit are used to produce this site. Michael P. McCurdy

 

http://www.amcyber.com/

The WebLair Editor is a PC Wed editor similar to BBEdit. It’s an add-on to Multi-Edit. the PC Programmer’s Editor. Bill Poff

 

http://www.eucanect.com/software/htmlinfo.html

I’ve been using HTMLEd Pro for about two years now. They just came out with a WYSIWYG editor called Carouselle (Win95) that I’ve been playing with and it is pretty neat. You have the option of working in WYSIWYG or text mode, it writes clean code, has lots of shortcut buttons and quick keys, a project manager, spell checker, search and replace on file or directory, embedded browsers (NN3, MSIE or an 'in-house browser), save as DOS, UNIX or to remote (on individual file or project, where the project only loads those files that have changed since the last upload), Frame/Table/Forms designers (haven’t tried these yet), image map editor, a document manager that will test for active links, support for HTML 3.2/NN/MSIE tags, etc. The price is reasonable: $99 CDN or $79 US. Anybody who already has HTMLEd Pro can upgrade for $35 CDN or $29 US. There’s also a discount if you upgrade from HTMLEd shareware, as well as discounts for educational and multi-site licenses. Terry Kluytmans

 

http://www.dexnet.com

Home Site was actually written by someone with experience maintaining a site. It’s a text editor rather than a WYSIWYG editor, but if you have MSIE installed, it can use the IE HTML ActiveX component (the part which parses and displays the HTML) as an internal preview engine. It’s pretty slick. Of all the editors I’ve used on Windows, this has to be the best all-around. The software was recently purchased by Allaire, the ColdFusion people, so don't be surprised if you eventually have to go to http://www.allaire.com for ongoing maintenance and new releases. Steve Champeon

 

http://www.slcc.edu/webguide/webber/index.html

I recently downloaded Webber, a shareware HTML editor (PC). It allows you to do your own coding but it highlights all the code in blue, allows you to open a number of html documents giving you file tags along the bottom - making it easy to cut and paste between, and best of all automatically gives all images sizes in the code when you browse for them. I also use my browser to view, on a pc it is easy to use control/c, v, and s for copy, paste, and save, and alt/tab for switching back and forth between the editor and browser. No file size limits that I have found. John Hooker

 

Suzanne Stephens SStephens@opendoor.com

 

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