TECH TOYS: Web page editors can

More and more people need to build Web pages. It may be just for posting

on an Intranet, but it still needs to be an HTML-based Web page. There is a

rapidly growing number of different ways to produce Web pages. What to

chose?

WISIWYG (what-you-see-is-what-you-get) editors have an obvious

attraction. You see what the reader will see. Except, it doesn’t quite work

that way on the Web. The author describes the style, the browser decides

how it will be displayed.

An example may help to explain what happens. The author identifies “This

Is Important!” as the most important kind of heading. “

This Is

Important!

” is inserted in the Web page. The user’s browser

determines how to display Heading1 material, i.e. the text between “

“.

Normally, something reasonable will be done with such text, but it’s not

under the author’s control. In a similar way, the author can’t control the

size of the page the user sees. Different users will have different resolution

monitors.

Using a familiar word processor would be convenient, but I’m

uncomfortable when a word processing offers to “save as” HTML. The result

is often not what is expected, especially when the reader uses different

settings in her browser. Moreover, the HTML code can be ugly, and bloated

in unseemly ways.

For simple Web pages, I find that Netscape Composer is a comfortable

choice. It doesn’t do fancy things, and that’s good. Its support is limited to

basic HTML. Most browsers will display the resulting pages correctly. It also

happens to be a part of the free Netscape Communicator.

Netscape Composer doesn’t answer all needs. It has no forms, no scripts,

and no good way to deal with multiple pages. HomeSite 4, from Allaire

www.allaire.com, is more powerful — a satisfying combination of

WISIWYG and direct HTML editing. It knows about projects, forms and

scripts.

HomeSite 4 has a number of neat features. It’s got wizards for standard

tasks. It’s got direct right-click editing of tag options. It can check for HTML

compatibility. It’s able to chart all interconnections on a site. It’s not free,

but is priced at less than US$100. Worth it.

HomeSite doesn’t do anything fancy with project management or graphics. A full Web site can have thousands of pages, with many people working on it. Often, document control is required. HomeSite will interface with

Version Control Systems, but does not provide VCS itself.

In my experience, one graphics-oriented Web editor stands above the rest. Dreamweaver knows about dynamic HTML and all the neat things it can do.

If you need fancy graphics, Dreamweaver is good. It works with HomeSite,

produces clean HTML, and provides basic checkin/checkout for a site’s Web

pages.

Consider Dreamweaver ( www.dreamweaver.com) if you need fancy

graphics. I wonder, however, about the value of much Internet graphics.

Too often, graphics deliver no value to the user. Think about her before you

bulk-up with graphics of marginal value.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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