Randy Kramer wrote: >Philippe Jadin wrote: > >>I still think it does, but probably I didn't explain clearly enough. >>Look at http://www.ektron.com/ewebeditpro.cfm?doc_id=1841 , for similar >>fucntionality. Here, instead of using java applets, we'd use abiword. >> > >philippe, > >Don't get discouraged. FWIW, I think it makes sense (it's a desirable >goal), and I believe it can be done. That belief is sort of a "fat, >dumb, and happy belief" because I (at this point in time) don't know how >to do it, and am not familiar enough with AbiWord or C++ to help make it >happen. > :)
> >On the other hand, I do a lot of work with TWiki (run a private and >contribute to a few public web sites -- Wikilearn). (TWiki is something >like the thing you described, but uses cgi "technology".) TWiki uses >its own markup language, and adding or editing content is done by typing >into a textarea, similar to what you mention above -- here are just a >few examples of the text markup. > It seems to be the same as zope's structured text. It's relativelly easy to use, but probably still not enough for non techies. >You might want to look at these pages on TWiki: > > * http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Codev/JavascriptBasedEditor > * http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Codev/AppletBasedEditor > >You can also find pages talking about Emacs w3 mode and a text editor >from Lynx. (TWiki.org has a search feature, but is also indexed by >Google. Try searches like [site:twiki.org <search keywords>]. > Thanks for the pointers! It seems there are applets in developpment, and maybe it's finally the easiest way, because it seems I won't find a lot of motivation to do this with abiword (was'nt it the point thought : Ease the editing of documents for endusers?) Philippe > >regards, >Randy Kramer > > ----------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word unsubscribe in the message body.
