> Use Notepad, instead? If you know you need HTML 5, you should use
> --
> Stanimir
I use N++ for serious work. I've been using SeaMonkey for routine
WYSIWYG editing. After years of trying different products, it's the
first one I've found that doesn't smell really bad. It's been doing
well so fa
>> I prefer notepad++ where i can do a string replace on all opened
files in one time. <<
Both are great editors with almost identical capabilities.
fwiw, while TextPad does support string replace across multiple files,
for really serious multi file processing, I've grown very fond of
TextPad
Beverly Howard wrote:
>> something more technically oriented than Composer (which has not
been updated since quite some time) <<
A related question... there used to be an option to specify an external
html source text editor which disappeared when the source tab appeared
in composer.
Are there
>> something more technically oriented than Composer (which has not
been updated since quite some time) <<
A related question... there used to be an option to specify an external
html source text editor which disappeared when the source tab appeared
in composer.
Are there any options to set
Wed, 30 Jun 2010 12:23:16 -0700 (PDT), /Marc Thibault/:
The mainstream browsers all now accept HTML 5 tagging in the file
intro, e.g.
SeaMonkey adds a mysterious uneditable quote to the DOCTYPE and adds a
redundant charset tag.
There should be an editable template for this stuff.
Use
The mainstream browsers all now accept HTML 5 tagging in the file
intro, e.g.
SeaMonkey adds a mysterious uneditable quote to the DOCTYPE and adds a
redundant charset tag.
There should be an editable template for this stuff.
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