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Netbeans does html too, although I've not used it much yet. It has some
interesting document mapping, and element insertion dialogs. It's not
Wysiwyg either, but that's a plus from my perspective.
Pete Hall
pbhall@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Nathan Andelin wrote:
| My daughter let me install Ubuntu on her Toshiba laptop. Before she
| takes it with her to college next fall I'd like to assess whether to
| switch from Windows to Linux on my next development laptop.
|
| I currently use Dreamweaver as my editor for HTML, CSS, and JavaScript
| files, but I've begun downloading and testing various Linux based
| editors in my spare time.
|
| So far, an editor named Screem looks like the best choice.
| Interestingly, it doesn't have a WYSIWYG design surface, but I really
| like the auto-complete popups when keying tag names, attributes, and
| events associated with HTML and CSS elements. And closing tags are
| automatically inserted. Colors are helpful. And there are a lot of
| other features to assist those of us who haven't memorized everything
| that browsers do.
|
| Are there other HTML editors I should be looking at? What about
| Eclipse? Or, an Eclipse plugin? I don't plan on doing any Java
| development. The Toshiba has only 768kb of ram. Would that be a
| deterant to evaluating Eclipse?
|
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