Webpage building program?
Webpage building program?
Since this is the only board I even bother to look at anymore, I'll ask you guys. What's the best WYSIWYG webpage builder right now (preferably one that can later support shopping carts)? I haven't used a WYSIWYG since Frontpage 98 and then did hard-coding using html and css. It's been about 5 years since I've done that and I'm just looking for a quick and simple program and not interested in doing it by hand.
Thanks!
Thanks!
That can support shopping carts.
...ummmmm...
There might be some design tool that lets you plug that kind of stuff in, but you might be better off looking at some kind of content management system (Joomla is a widely-used one I think) and then using your WYSIWYG tool just to develop the template for that (will almost certainly require a small amount of diving into the HTML to insert the mark-up to tell the CMS what parts of the template are used for what though).
Dreamweaver remains the most popular web design tool that supports WYSIWYG, unless things have changed faster than I thought. FrontPage was abandoned by Microsoft, who now seem to be focusing their efforts on multiple products aimed at different audiences (Expression Web for web designers, Sharepoint for company portals/intranet sites, and I think I heard of something vaguely similar to Sharepoint aimed at small business owners as well, though I'm not sure whether it's out yet). There are probably also open-source WYSIWYG web design applications, but none that are well-known enough for me to name them off the top of my head...
...ummmmm...
There might be some design tool that lets you plug that kind of stuff in, but you might be better off looking at some kind of content management system (Joomla is a widely-used one I think) and then using your WYSIWYG tool just to develop the template for that (will almost certainly require a small amount of diving into the HTML to insert the mark-up to tell the CMS what parts of the template are used for what though).
Dreamweaver remains the most popular web design tool that supports WYSIWYG, unless things have changed faster than I thought. FrontPage was abandoned by Microsoft, who now seem to be focusing their efforts on multiple products aimed at different audiences (Expression Web for web designers, Sharepoint for company portals/intranet sites, and I think I heard of something vaguely similar to Sharepoint aimed at small business owners as well, though I'm not sure whether it's out yet). There are probably also open-source WYSIWYG web design applications, but none that are well-known enough for me to name them off the top of my head...
Re:
They have sharepoint where I work ... and over half of the users use FireFox with it almost exclusively because of content that doesn't work right with IE (funny. MS product that works best with FireFox instead of IE )Duper wrote:avoid sharepoint at all costs.
It's great for projects intra company, but not as a design tool. It's cumbersome and likes to lock data into it's own files that are un-exportable.
It has it's place, but often it's marketed well outside its scope. Our company tried to use it for document managment.
Re:
How well does it work for document managing? We just got a SharePoint 2010 liscense, and it's a booger to get the permissions right (we only want to use it for document/task management, and perhaps as a media manager).Duper wrote:avoid sharepoint at all costs.
It's great for projects intra company, but not as a design tool. It's cumbersome and likes to lock data into it's own files that are un-exportable.
It has it's place, but often it's marketed well outside its scope. Our company tried to use it for document managment.
Strictly as doc management? no. There is no way to export any files to use data with other apps. Also, depending on the what your are doing and how many are involved, with permissions in place, you could potentially BURY a mail server.. quickly.
It's really shines in product development on an intranet. It's secure and docs are tracked.
It's really shines in product development on an intranet. It's secure and docs are tracked.