What You Read Is What You Get? - Page 4


© Arnvid Aakre
Page 4
align=left> where you get a total visual map of the site you build or maintain. Note (enter the left tumb image to see the full picture of the site map feature) that you can collapse and expand the tree under each page or section. This feature make it a breeze to have an overview over a website - however large it is.

To work on a page, just mark any "page" in site view and open this in page view for editing. Then you get to "page view" which is the heart of the generator. This is where both the basics and the whistles are to be found. Part from this you will find a lot of templates for style setups or make your own templates to work as such. Fusion has of course publishing features and a lot more! I will not go in details here, as I find this review of NetObjects Fusion a brilliant presentation as such.

For travel professionals who want to create his or her own web presence - without having own web gurus in house, a WYSIWYG editor is maybe just what is needed. Try what is around, I have just tried to give an overview and recommendation in different categories. The two previous articles about html editors covers both freeware editors and shareware editors.

My bottom line is still, online as offline - that I don't believe when someone tell you any kind of "ultimate truth". Same goes when someone says "this" (or that) "is the only solution for html editing".

A text editor, a wizard driven editor or an html generator - it's basically your own need and background you should use as search engine for your matching software. It is this blend that will guide you to the "best" editor - for you...


Although I'm finishing the topic with html editors with this third article, I will follow up some of them and also promise to evaluate the new competition HomeSite have got: the last version of SpiderWriter!

Coming articles in this long serial about software for travel professionals, will focus on additional tools for a best possible web presence: image editors, code cleaners, software for maps - and more.

Until then I hope you understand: WYCIWTG
(what you code is what they get) - and please never forget that travelers tend to read between coded lines as well...

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

2.   Feb 18, 2001 4:07 AM
In response to message posted by Maryel:

Thank you Mary Ellen, I knew about "technical writers" - but "technical poets" was ...


-- posted by Arnvid


1.   Feb 16, 2001 7:49 AM
You are a poet or at least you write like a poet even when you are writing about technology. I enjoyed this article, however with technology I still can't read between the lines. By the way the pict ...

-- posted by Maryel





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