Visser Labs

HTML CSS Web Developer Toolbox; Text editors

By Michael Visser.

BeyondCompare

The best one-on-one file comparison editor hands down. Nothing comes close! Integrating a one-to-one line matching algorithm makes this is the simplest file comparison tool for use on a day-to-day basis.

Screenshot of Beyond Compare by Scooter Software

UltraEdit

My anything editor. Be it markup for a HTML template or opening some never before seen file ending in an alien extension, UltraEdit’s my choice. Intelligent syntax suggestion and an assortment of provided and freely available syntax highlighting formats makes my job easier.

UltraEdit by IDM Solutions

TinyMCE

Is there any other tool that provides semantic markup of content that comes even close to the quality generated by TinyMCE? Officially, no. There are some competition very close behind.

TinyMCE has a familiar interface so you can concentrate on content generation and not which buttons create three-tier unordered lists! I admit I’ve made a few two level lists now with TinyMCE…

As interest and wider support of WYMeditor - currently in beta - springs forth I expect to install WYMeditor as the default Administrator level text editor but provide TinyMCE as the default for client-accessible content.

TinyMCE Editor

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About the article

This article was written on 2007-04-03 at 20:14:57+0000, filed under Uncategorized and tagged , .

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About the author

Michael Visser is the founder of Visser Labs. He works as a professional Front-end Web Developer, loves Wordpress, Joomla and helping people get more out of their sites.

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5 Comments

  1. Kyle said:

    Hi Michael,

    I basically use Dreamweaver Code View for all my HTML/CSS coding.

    I tried UltraEdit a few months back but couldn’t get used to it.
    I’ll download and try the other you mentioned.

    Cheers,
    Kyle.

    Comment by Kyle — April 3, 2007 @ 9:40 pm

  2. Michael said:

    Thanks Kyle, I have a few colleagues that wouldn’t sleep at night without DW nearby! What do you use DW for though, it’s the most expensive code editor if that’s all you’re using of the suite. :D

    Do you make use of FTP check in/out functionality in your field, I’d be interested to know how it developed in the last release; your site is missing something too, content?

    Comment by Michael — April 3, 2007 @ 9:45 pm

  3. Kyle said:

    Hi Michael,

    The main reason why I like it and pay the extra dosh for it is because I can quickly flick into display view and check out how the code is looking, instead of having to go into Firefox and keep on clicking the refresh button over and over again - just a personal preference of mine :). The other main function I use is as you said the FTP functionality.

    “your site is missing something too, content?”
    Your right on the mark with that one, I only use that site to test stuff and just as a personal page. I don’t have a “business” website per say yet, but I’m planning on getting a website up and going by the end of the year and taking on some free lance work, I’m just to busy with school and all at the moment.

    Kyle.

    Comment by Kyle — April 3, 2007 @ 10:09 pm

  4. Michael said:

    I’ll write a post over the next few days as to why I don’t use DW; I used to exclusively use DW before moving into a web production environment.

    Good luck with you projects Kyle, let me know how things go!

    Comment by Michael — April 3, 2007 @ 10:12 pm

  5. Kyle said:

    Thanks Michael,

    I’ll stick around and have a read, I’ve subscribed to your feed.

    Cheers,
    Kyle.

    Comment by Kyle — April 3, 2007 @ 10:21 pm

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