Hi folks, I wholeheartedly agree that one should learn handcoded html, if only in order to be able to clean up what the html editors do that you want to customize. I have found that it is possible to write very complex files with code warrior or dreamweaver. From the zope interface, you can import a dtml document, and pull up the edited file into zope. When you try to submit the 'change' command, the zope parser will throw out any errors, etc. ciao! greg. Gregory Haley venaca.com Anser wrote:
"Henny van der Linde" <linde@inline-info.nl> wrote:
...Zope forces you often to go to nitty gritty details of HTML programming. I think that's a good thing (for me). GUI tools tend to make you very lazy and often produce horrible HTML (for example Frontpage).
Today's best WYSIWYG editors produce excellent HTML, including Dreamweaver and Allaire Homesite. (There should be a rule that nothing is every usefully compared to the hideous Frontpage.)
Zope's text box interfaces do encourage you to mess with low level HTML, but there is no help or verification that you actually know what you're doing. Learning raw HTML is fun and can be useful, but if you program that way, you should always follow up with a *validator* like CSE HTML Validator or a recent build of Weblint. You will find errors! And errors do matter!
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