what are you using to write webpages?
Gustavo Seabra
seabra at ksu.edu
Sat Jan 22 06:18:51 UTC 2005
August wrote:
>On fre, 2005-01-21 at 15:25 -0700, Guy Fraser wrote:
>
>
>>On Fri, 2005-21-01 at 23:11 +0100, August wrote:
>>
>>
>>>On fre, 2005-01-21 at 18:31 +0100, Rolf Gerrits wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>BB Cao wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Hi Everyone,
>>>>>
>>>>>I am starting to write a webpage for my own, just
>>>>>little curious in choosing softwares:
>>>>>What are you using to write webpages?
>>>>>
>>>>>Thanks!
>>>>>
>>>>>Best,
>>>>>BB Cao
>>>>>
>>>>>__________________________________________________
>>>>>Do You Yahoo!?
>>>>>Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
>>>>>http://mail.yahoo.com
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>Mozilla (Composer) works nice.
>>>>
>>>>Rolf
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>I use GNU Emacs with Tidy
>>>(http://tidy.sourceforge.net/src/tidy_src.tgz). I have the following
>>>lines in my .emacs file:
>>>
>>>(defcustom my-tidy-command "tidy -indent" "")
>>>
>>>(defun my-tidy-buffer ()
>>> "(my-tidy-buffer) runs tidy on the current buffer."
>>> (interactive)
>>> (let ((error-buffer "*tidy-errors*")
>>> (saved-point (point)))
>>> (when (get-buffer error-buffer)
>>> (kill-buffer error-buffer))
>>> (shell-command-on-region (point-min) (point-max)
>>> my-tidy-command nil t error-buffer)
>>> (deactivate-mark) ;seems like `shell-command-on-region'
>>> ; modifies the mark
>>> (goto-char (min saved-point (point-max)))
>>> (set-buffer error-buffer)
>>> (compilation-mode)
>>> (goto-char (point-min))
>>> (unless (looking-at "\\<line\\>")
>>> (delete-window (get-buffer-window error-buffer))
>>> (message "Tidy: No warnings or errors were found."))))
>>>
>>>(defun my-sgml-mode-hook ()
>>> (local-set-key [f11] 'my-tidy-buffer))
>>>
>>>--
>>>August
>>>
>>>
>>Ooh, yum that looks tasty.;-[
>>
>>How about vi. ;-)
>>Just kidding.
>>
>>I use nedit, vi or what ever I can get my hands on, but
>>for someone who is just learning, Quanta or Mozilla composer
>>would be a good place to start. I would also suggest
>>looking at the generated code, to learn how things work.
>>
>>
>
>OK, I see your point. Some Emacs users might find the info useful
>though. There are also complete Emacs tidy.el modes out there, but for
>me this is all I need (the less code the better).
>
>
>
Hi, I just want to point out that, as fas as I know, Quanta+ is
integrated with Tidy. Just check under
Tools --> HTML Tidy syntax checking. Actually, Quanta+ has been
considered the best web development tool available.
--
--
----------------------------------
Gustavo Seabra - Graduate Student
Chemistry Department
Kansas State University
----------------------------------
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