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There are two major
WYSIWYG(What You See Is What You Get) editors available
for beginners. These are: Microsoft FrontPage and
Macromedia Dreamweaver. So the question is which one is
better?
This article is not
intended to humiliate Dreamweaver or FrontPage editors. I
just attempted to analyze both programs from different
points, based on Internet research, experience of other
users and my years of html coding experience.
To say honest I am not the
fan both of them. In our production we regularly use
AceHtmlPro but the fact is that many of our customers DO
use either FrontPage or Dreamweaver and that's the reason
our employee have to be familiar with both. Writing the
article I have talked to our stuff and did some research
about both editors and I came up with the facts I'd like
to share with you.
Pluses and minuses of MS
FrontPage:
1. FrontPage as all
Microsoft product has so many templates and ready to use
solutions that you cannot admit it is easier for beginner
to start using FrontPage to build his first website. You
can create simple website personal or business with
several clicks and all you will need to do next is to
enter your text and pictures instead of used by FrontPage
by default.
2. The good news is
FrontPage html pages look exactly as they appear in MS
Explorer and the bad news is that they look perfect ONLY
in MS Explorer. However you may program FrontPage to get
rid of nasty tags but I believe it requires some hand
coding to adjust pages to Netscape or Opera. Another good
news for FrontPage users: about 93% of all internet
clients use MS Explorer 5 and higher.
3. As Microsoft application
FrontPage is better with ASP pages, which are standard for
Windows based hosting and windows based programming.
4. MS FrontPage perfectly
interacts with other MS Office products. For example you
can easily cut and paste some chart from MS Excel into
FrontPage working area.
5. By default MS FrontPage
uses table with the fixed width and sometimes it can be a
problem to make it display tables with percentage width.
Pluses and minuses of
Macromedia Dreamweaver:
1. You can build your own
templates and use them to edit hundreds of pages of your
website with one single click. Although Dreamweaver adds
some comment tags to html file to distinguish editable and
non-editable areas and I read in one forum that people
experience some troubles applying template to more then
700 pages as they ran out of memory but I had never chance
to test that.
2. Pages done with
Dreamweaver usually have less trash in coding. They look
almost perfect with Netscape, Opera and MS Explorer.
3. Dreamweaver doing
amazing thing with SSI files and other server side include
technology. Php code looks much nicer however with ASP
scripts FrontPage still better.
4. Dreamweaver is much
better interacts with other macromedia products.
5. Both editors in most
cases display CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) correctly. But
if you enter style attribute twice in Dreamweaver for it
will definitely ruin your page and you will be able
preview your page partly before this error. FrontPage
however handles such mistakes easily.
There are many others
pluses and minuses in both editors if I wrote about al of
them I should probably start a book rather then single
article, but those I have mention I heard most about.
My idea is that MS
FrontPage is ideal for beginners as it provides so much
help and templates, then you should move to Dreamweaver
when you feel yourself more comfortable with the html code
and finally, if you are serious about web design, you
should reach the hand coding level as it still best way
for coding pages. It gives you the freedom of using tags
and styles, as you want them to use. Do not forget however
validate you hand coding, or code generated with FrontPage
or Dreamweaver. You will be surprised if you knew how many
errors produced during coding starting from broken links
to invalid tag attributes.
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About
The Author
Oleg
Lazarenko Production manager of
Metamorphosis Website Design Studio -
Custom design, Website Templates, Web
design Articles and Tutorials.
http://www.metamorphozis.com
You may
reprint this tutorial for free as long as
the content, About the Author sections and
all links remain unchanged. |
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