Puneet opined 

> the truth is that it is _primarily_ a wysiwig html 
> editor... but if you were to think of it as a web application 
> development IDE... then it would make sense to offer some basic 
> scripting support (which it does, except not for perl), or a darn good 
> integration with a (or several) external editors.

I don't know much about templates, and I like GoLive, in concept,
especially now that 300 MHz processors are considered slow. (First
experience with GoLive was the pre-Adobe days on an, erm, LC 630.
Speaking of which, anyone know a place in the Hanshin (Osaka -- Kobe)
area to get a non-buggy 68040 cheap? I still have one of those boxes,
and I want to dual-boot openBSD on it.) 

But I found that what I usually did was design the page, grab the design
elements, and paste them into the real page. That is, I left GoLive
behind and used a straight text editor once the design work was done. 
(Used CodeWarrior's editor since it was pretty stable with shift-JIS and
handled the various flavors of line-endings for me. I like BBEdit, too.)

General-purpose WYSIWYG editors for XML are still a little bit ahead of
us on the software technology curve.

Say, my company is training a large group of us on Struts (Java -- Jakarta).
Anyone know of a comparable project with Perl, i. e., a framework that
would allow separating the business model and control logic out of the
view?

-- 
Joel Rees <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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