HTML editor?

Can anyone recommend a good but not to expensive HTML editor? I use one called WeBuilder 2005, but I don't really like it that much, can anyone recommend one please? Also, I use a Windows XP.

Public Comments

  1. I really like using MS FrontPage 2003. I know many don't but I find it easy to use. I use the HTML editor mode about 50% of the time and the WYSIWYG mode the rest. good luck
  2. Coffee Cup. It has wysiwyg. You can see it has many plug-ins. It's a shareware. It's pretty good for shareware and inexpensive. You can find on Cnet.com or tucows.com.
  3. notepad :D
  4. Dreamweaver
  5. I prefer Dreamweaver... but it's not cheap. Did you try tucows.com for some different freeware or shareware?
  6. See if you can find an old copy of Textpad from Download.com, its basic but works. I can't think of any inexpensive css editors though. I just use Notepad.
  7. The WYSIWYG editors -- what you see is what you get all leave me cold. Invariably they attached a big block of code at the first of your document that can just get into something that is hard to customize. Learn HTML, CSS and javascript from the textbooks and hand code it. The best editor that helps you organize code, that I like, you can find at downloads.com for free and it's called Arachnophilia (fear of spiders, for the "web").
  8. You might want to try the URL below. It has many good free HTML editors and tools, articles and reveiws and many other things that may interest you. I hope this helps you out.
  9. HTMLKit from www.chami.com I like this
  10. Dreamweaver is definitely the best of the WYSIWYG editors around, and one of the few I would really use. However it does not come cheap and I could not really recommend a beginner shelling out that much. I detest FrontPage because it is very limited and produces clunky code. I tend to code directly in Notepad and therefore expect code to be very clean so that mistakes can be swiftly corrected. Learning HTML is a great idea and with some excellent tutorials around now, it's a lot less daunting than it used to be. I suggest checking out the one below which has helped many friends learn.
  11. i use dreamweaver (not by choice, company likes using it), personally i use one called editplus. Edit plus is cheap, and allows you to script in perl, php, asp, javascript etc as well
  12. Use Macromedia Dreamweaver to layout your page....and Notepad for hand coding....it`s the best but not cheap.....if Dreamweaver burns a hole in your pocket then get an editor from a shareware website....... try http://shareware.cnet.com
  13. Although I don't use many of it's features now (like buttons and menus etc), I do still use FrontPage 2003 as my main HTML editor. I code all of my pages from scratch, using CSS, ASP and VBScript, but find FrontPage very good for making global changes etc.
  14. yeah dreamweaver is probably your best bet. very easy to use and you can probably pick up an older version for no that much. Try to use notepad as much as you can. HTML is generally very simple to program and theres so many tutorials out there. If you do use an editor, they usually chuck random code in thats not needed. Do it in notepad and your code will be pure and simple and search bots will love it!!
  15. Dreamweaver doesn't have to be that expensive. As you are a student you can get the academic license - http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B000AP1N8S/202-5912846-9948607?v=glance&n=300435 Very good for £69.96 as the regular price is over £700 ! See here for details of what qualifies for the academic licensing- http://www.adobe.com/uk/education/purchasing/qualify.html
  16. I've been programming for over 16 years...and I still use notepad!
  17. Agree Dreamweaver is pretty good, you can often get slightly older versions for reasonable cash on EBAY and the like. Unless you are doing soemhting really whizzy then a slightly battered pld version of Dreamweaver (say V4 or above) will probablky be a good satrting point. Another plus is that there are lots of books documenting Dreamweaver. Better still try to get an old studio version (includes the image editor Fireworks which is very very good for web work (you can scale, resize manipulate graphics very easily - it isn't very hot on phot manipulation (eg changing colour casts, and other image processing tasks where soemthing like photoshop excells) failing that HTML KIT from Chami is quite good, you do need to have a bit of knowledge of HTML to get the best from it though. Best of all HTML-Kit is free, extensible, so if you satrt using things like PHP or other languages it has plugins that can redice the time taken to create your web pages.
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