W3C's Web Editor
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/
Getting the Binary Distribution
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/User/BinDist.html
Read the "Amaya User Manual"
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/Distribution/manual.pdf
This is a locally installed program (similar to your Browser).
The opening blurb (on the 1st run after installing) reads as follows:
"Amaya is a Web client that acts both as a browser and as an authoring tool. It has been designed by W3C and INRIA with the primary purpose of demonstrating new Web technologies and helping users to generate valid Web pages. Thanks to the European (FP6) Palette project, Amaya 11 is much easier to use, through its new user interface and its innovative templating system.
With Amaya, you can manipulate rich Web pages containing forms, tables, and the most advanced features from XHTML. You can create and edit complex mathematical expressions and graphics within Web pages. You can style your documents using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). "
Some User Info... "About" pages... etc.
Notes on the Amaya HTML Editor
http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/~matloff/amaya.html
<this page is exceptionally basic... but that makes it a fairly decent introduction>
Try searching the web for more information. There are a number of references like vids on YouTube that may be useful.
:-)
Another program to consider, if you have not tried it already, is KompoZer ... which is produced by Mozilla (the makers of Firefox and Thunderbird), and is another Open Source project.
:-)
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/
Getting the Binary Distribution
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/User/BinDist.html
Read the "Amaya User Manual"
http://www.w3.org/Amaya/Distribution/manual.pdf
This is a locally installed program (similar to your Browser).
The opening blurb (on the 1st run after installing) reads as follows:
"Amaya is a Web client that acts both as a browser and as an authoring tool. It has been designed by W3C and INRIA with the primary purpose of demonstrating new Web technologies and helping users to generate valid Web pages. Thanks to the European (FP6) Palette project, Amaya 11 is much easier to use, through its new user interface and its innovative templating system.
With Amaya, you can manipulate rich Web pages containing forms, tables, and the most advanced features from XHTML. You can create and edit complex mathematical expressions and graphics within Web pages. You can style your documents using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). "
Some User Info... "About" pages... etc.
Notes on the Amaya HTML Editor
http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/~matloff/amaya.html
<this page is exceptionally basic... but that makes it a fairly decent introduction>
Try searching the web for more information. There are a number of references like vids on YouTube that may be useful.
:-)
Another program to consider, if you have not tried it already, is KompoZer ... which is produced by Mozilla (the makers of Firefox and Thunderbird), and is another Open Source project.
:-)
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