About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 41. Chapters: Free HTML editors, JavaScript-based HTML editors, Comparison of HTML editors, TkWWW, NetBeans, NetObjects Fusion, SeaMonkey, Aptana, Dojo Toolkit, Eclipse, Microsoft Expression Web, Microsoft FrontPage, WorldWideWeb, Notepad++, Amaya, Macromedia HomeSite, Adobe Dreamweaver, Microsoft SharePoint Designer, TinyMCE, JEdit, Adobe GoLive, CSE HTML Validator, List of HTML editors, Quanta Plus, SlickEdit, Coda, SciTE, Nvu, TopStyle, CKEditor, Adobe PageMill, HTML-Kit, Bluefish, CreaText, 350pages, Aloha Editor, ZyWeb, RapidWeaver, Codeita, HoTMetaL, Mozilla Composer, KompoZer, SkEdit, BlueGriffon, RText, Comparison of free web hosting services, Arachnophilia, Netscape Composer, OpenBEXI, EditPlus, Lapis, Comparison of early HTML editors, Tkhtml, JuffEd, WYMeditor, Claris Homepage, AOLpress, YUI Rich Text Editor, FirstPage, BestAddress HTML Editor, CoffeeCup HTML Editor, Site Studio, KImageMapEditor, Web Page Maker, HotDog, Alleycode HTML Editor. Excerpt: The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of HTML editors. This article is not all-inclusive or necessarily up-to-date. Please see the individual products' articles for further information, and Comparison of text editors for information on text editors, many of which have features to assist with writing HTML. tkWWW was an early web browser/WYSIWYG HTML editor written by Joseph Wang at the MIT as part of the Project Athena and the Globewide Network Academy project. The browser was based on the Tcl language and the tk toolkit extension but did not achieve broad user acceptance or market share although it was included in many Linux distributions by default. Joseph Wang wanted tkWWW to become a replacement for rrn and to become a "swiss army knife" of networked computing. Joseph Wang announced in July 1992 that he was developing a web bro...