Good HTML editor

  • Thread starter Thread starter Onno Tasler
  • Start date Start date
omega said:
Btw, I had the annoying experience of buying Notetab Standard Edition
/before/ realizing that even that version did not have multiple undo.

I had the equally annoying experience of buying the Notetab Pro version and
found that it cannot use proportional fonts, just fixed pitch.

The most useless buy I've ever done of software.
If I use notetab sometimes I always use the free version where I can use
good readable fonts.

I learned to read in real books, not on web pages as most kids do today, so
I cannot stand these ugly and hard-to-read non-serif and fixed-pitch fonts
which are so common in the computer world.

Times New Roman 14p is a good font.
 
Roger said:
I had the equally annoying experience of buying the Notetab Pro
version and found that it cannot use proportional fonts, just fixed
pitch.

If you want proportional fonts, I think you would prefer a word
processor to a text editor.
I learned to read in real books, not on web pages as most kids do
today, so I cannot stand these ugly and hard-to-read non-serif and
fixed-pitch fonts which are so common in the computer world.

Sans-serif fonts are generally also proportional. Their use is merely a
matter of style/preference.

But *monospaced* fonts are almost a necessity if you're doing
programming or text processing.

I use Notetab Pro every day (I live in it!), and I would go crazy
without its monospaced font. But the web pages I design all use
proportional (serif) fonts. Can you see the difference? One is for
developers, the other for end-users.

If you're writing letters, books, etc., use a *word* processor. Text
processing requires a whole different mindset.
 
Hallo!

Thanks for all the answers. I think I will use Stone's Webwriter 4, as
long as one does not need the advanced stuff the missing translation is
not a big hindrance. And it seems to be quite exactly what I looked for:
Phase 5² + PNG Support. :)

bye,

Onno
 
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