Deamweaver 8

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  • 'sNiek

    Deamweaver 8

    Soon Dreamweaver 8 will be released:


    Has anyone used/seen a beta-version? According to the site it has an
    approved css-suport.



    --
    Niek
  • Harlan Messinger

    #2
    Re: Deamweaver 8

    'sNiek wrote:[color=blue]
    > Soon Dreamweaver 8 will be released:
    > http://www.macromedia.com/software/d.../?promoid=BINR
    >
    > Has anyone used/seen a beta-version? According to the site it has an
    > approved css-suport.[/color]


    "Approved"? By whom?

    Comment

    • 'sNiek

      #3
      Re: Deamweaver 8

      Harlan Messinger schreef:[color=blue]
      > 'sNiek wrote:
      >[color=green]
      >> Soon Dreamweaver 8 will be released:
      >> http://www.macromedia.com/software/d.../?promoid=BINR
      >>
      >> Has anyone used/seen a beta-version? According to the site it has an
      >> approved css-suport.[/color]
      >
      >
      >
      > "Approved"? By whom?[/color]


      By nobody, I meant improved... sorry!

      --
      Niek

      Comment

      • Matt Silberstein

        #4
        Re: Deamweaver 8

        On Wed, 17 Aug 2005 10:01:30 -0400, in
        comp.infosystem s.www.authoring.stylesheets , Harlan Messinger
        <hmessinger.rem ovethis@comcast .net> in
        <3mgu9qF16m5e6U 1@individual.ne t> wrote:
        [color=blue]
        >'sNiek wrote:[color=green]
        >> Soon Dreamweaver 8 will be released:
        >> http://www.macromedia.com/software/d.../?promoid=BINR
        >>
        >> Has anyone used/seen a beta-version? According to the site it has an
        >> approved css-suport.[/color]
        >
        >
        >"Approved"? By whom?[/color]

        It is funny how the mind works. I read it as "improved", what I am
        sure he meant, the first time. I just did not see the typo.


        --
        Matt Silberstein


        And now our bodies are oh so close and tight
        It never felt so good, it never felt so right
        And we're glowing like the metal on the edge of a knife
        C'mon! Hold on tight!
        C'mon! Hold on tight!

        Though it's cold and lonley in the deep dark night
        I can see paradise by the dashboard light
        Paradise by the dashboard light

        Jim Steinman

        Comment

        • Gérard Talbot

          #5
          Re: Deamweaver 8

          'sNiek wrote :[color=blue]
          > Soon Dreamweaver 8 will be released:
          > http://www.macromedia.com/software/d.../?promoid=BINR
          >
          > Has anyone used/seen a beta-version? According to the site it has an
          > approved css-suport.
          >
          >
          >[/color]

          MacroMedia does not believe in valid code. They prefer to use invalid
          markup code to create a webpage promoting their product.

          MacroMedia believes in non-resizable secondary window; that's the way
          MacroMedia promotes accessibility.

          MacroMedia believes in non-scrollable secondary windows; it's their way
          to say "Make your visitors fit into *your* well-crafted-with-DreamWeaver
          popup window."

          MacroMedia believes in browser sniffing based on user agent string
          detection. MacroMedia does not believe in object/feature detection. And
          they are teaching you how to do the same for your visitors.

          MacroMedia believes in shock-wave flash, whether the user likes Flash or
          not. And they want you to do the same.

          MacroMedia believes in webpages that takes forever to load, in font size
          of 10px for navigation links, in webpages design that rely on an insane
          amount of stylesheets, hundreds css rules, thousands of declarations and
          blatant over-constrained designs.

          MacroMedia believes in generous amounts of document.write( ), spacer gifs
          now called flash pixels, believes in classitis designs and in the reign
          of "javascript :" pseudo-links.

          MacroMedia does not believe in user community driven software nor in
          compliance with W3C web standards. MacroMedia believes $399 US to be a
          fair price for purchasing a single licence for DreamWeaver 8.

          MacroMedia has been a pionneer on making inaccessible webpages, on using
          deprecated techniques, on imposing Flash to visitors, on promoting and
          reusing forever deprecated coding techniques, on using again and again
          obsolete MacroMedia functions for years and years.

          And they'll keep on doing all of this with their future webpage which
          will be promoting DreamWeaver 9 for only $399 too.

          Gérard
          --
          remove blah to email me

          Comment

          • 'sNiek

            #6
            Re: Deamweaver 8

            Gérard Talbot schreef:[color=blue]
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia
            > MacroMedia[/color]

            I gather that you're not a Macromedia fan :-)

            I think dat DW is one of the best 'WYSIWYG'-editors available, surely it
            has it's minr points (oke, quite a bunch). But it has features to
            build complex websites and using multiple templates and/or library-items
            (I hate that name).

            Anyway, you can give me a hint on a good alternative?



            --
            Niek

            Comment

            • Gérard Talbot

              #7
              Re: Deamweaver 8

              'sNiek wrote :[color=blue]
              > Gérard Talbot schreef:
              >[color=green]
              >> MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia
              >> MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia MacroMedia[/color]
              >
              >
              > I gather that you're not a Macromedia fan :-)
              >[/color]

              I've never use it actually. But I've seen the code it generates hundreds
              and hundreds of times on the web.
              [color=blue]
              > I think dat DW is one of the best 'WYSIWYG'-editors available, surely it
              > has it's minr points (oke, quite a bunch).[/color]

              The problem is not so much the weaknesses, flaws, limitations of a tool
              as much as the competence, experience, abilities of its user to begin
              with. I certainly could be able to use DW 8. But I am able to avoid
              using it entirely.
              One thing I would definitely not use are the pre-made javascript/DHTML
              functions it offers. The web is full of functions starting with "MM_"
              and most of them are wrongly, badly written and people never question
              these functions *because they do not understand these functions at all
              to begin with*. They only look for the results. So with time, people
              using DW become less and less web authors and more and more DW "operators" .

              But it has features to build[color=blue]
              > complex websites and using multiple templates and/or library-items (I
              > hate that name).
              >
              > Anyway, you can give me a hint on a good alternative?
              >[/color]

              Nr 1 alternative: hand code. That's right. Start learning and
              understanding what you write. I see hundreds of benefits: you'll
              actually manage, update, upgrade your webpages a lot better. In the long
              run, your webpages will be/should be more accessible, web standards
              compliant, interoperable across platforms, media, devices, etc.

              Nr 2 alternative: Nvu 1.0 <http://www.nvu.com/>. Free, user-community
              driven, highly web standards compliant. Together with the CSS built-in
              editor (CaScadeS), Venkman javascript debugger and DOM inspector, you
              get very powerful tools for any kind of DHTML website.

              Gérard
              --
              remove blah to email me

              Comment

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