>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 01/09/03 03:30PM >>>
>One thing, though.
>
>Most people here referred to authoring web pages, not web sites. emacs,
>vim and not-tab-pro may be great editors, but they are still meant for
>editing single HTML pages.
>
>Even if your "site" is only a couple of pages, adding some common content
>(a common toolbal/sidebar) and a common look, and changing it once in a
>while can be tedious with a simple text editor.
>
>This is where you need some "machine-generated html". It can be in the
>form of pre-processed html, server-side pre-processed html (e.g: shtml,
>php). In those cases you can still use any decent html editor to create
>the original "templates".
>
>Of the tools mentioned here, mozilla, word and such create html pages.
>FrontPage and DreamWeaver create "sites". I'm not sure about Quanta.
>
>--
>Tzafrir Cohen
>mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>http://www.technion.ac.il/~tzafrir


Good point.  One I didn't see mentioned yet that is quite well-suited to 
work in conjunction with vim or notepad, but add some fancy stuff like common 
sidebars and such is wml...  http://thewml.org/

Paul

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