Hi everyone,
thanks for the education.
Quite the adventure actually.
Granted it might have been the editor I tried, since I am not as of yet
physically able to use voiceover or textedit. Still, trying to edit the
information with the .htm file for my site page produced...less than
successful
Textedit can also act as a WYSIWYG editor for HTML files, you don't have to
be a HTML guru.
TextWrangler and(which I understand is being phased out) and its big
brother BBEdit are not usable by VoiceOver users. I can forward my reply
from support if you want to see it, but right now their text wid
If you are just modifying the content then a simple text editor will
work fine. In the end, unless there is some complex content management
system behind the scenes, HTML files are just text. So you could open up
the text file, wade through (and otherwise ignore) all the markup and
just modify
I am not doing the editing myself. Instead, as requested by the person
doing the work, I asked for a program suggestion.
I certainly resonate with the task being simple in text, but I do not
judge the skills of others by assuming they match my own.
Thanks all,
Karen
On Mon, 24 Jul 2017, -dan
If that is all you want to change a simple text editor is the perfect tool.
A html editor would be overkill.
Html coding is plain text encased within a set of text characters to render
function and format when a browser encounters them.
On Sun, 23 Jul 2017, Karen Lewellen wrote:
To the best
s.com [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Karen Lewellen
Sent: Monday, 24 July 2017 3:40 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: mac HTML editor suggestion?
I suppose I am surprised there are no mac editors for HTML.
DOS has them after all.
Kare
On Sun, 23 Jul
Hi,
There are actually quite a few HTML editors for Mac including Adobe Dream
Weaver. I've simply used TextEdit myself to edit numerous sites myself as it
is accessible and easy to use. This list may be a little out of date, but it's
a list of free HTML Editors suggested by one person on the
I suppose I am surprised there are no mac editors for HTML.
DOS has them after all.
Kare
On Sun, 23 Jul 2017, Erik Burggraaf wrote:
Regardless, you still have to set text edit to plain text instead of RTF, and
you still have to turn off Smart symbols. If you don't, then it will save
your e
Regardless, you still have to set text edit to plain text instead of RTF,
and you still have to turn off Smart symbols. If you don't, then it will
save your encoding improperly, whether you change any of it or not. Best, Eric
On July 23, 2017 1:56:51 PM Karen Lewellen wrote:
To the best of
To the best of my knowledge text editing is not the goal here. None of
the
page coding will be changed, just my off ice address / number on the
contacts page.
Kare
On Sun, 23 Jul 2017, Erik Burggraaf wrote:
Set text edit to use plain text instead of RTF. Then turn off all of the
special
Set text edit to use plain text instead of RTF. Then turn off all of the
special symbols, and you have a text editor for editing HTML. This is how I
did most of my code when I had a Mac.
On July 22, 2017 9:16:34 PM Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi folks,
I have a friend who is a former apple staffer
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