atw: Re: Free / open-source / shareware / really cheap webpage and website editor

Anyone familiar with Joomla? http://www.joomla.org/
 It claims to be free.
I am considering using Joomla as the front door to a site that is nested within a larger host site and as a result has limitations on using a domain name or creating any variety outside of the established template.
Are these all similar to plone?
MNMary

On 8/26/2008 4:53:47 AM, austechwriter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Top Style is a pretty useful tool as well. Clunky in a network environment.
> Either the bought version, or the Lite version are nice. It is a CSS
> editor first off.
>
> Regards;
> Warren
>
> From: austechwriter-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:austechwriter-
> bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Howard.Silcock@xxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Tuesday, 26 August 2008 15:21
> To: austechwriter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: atw: Re: Free / open-source / shareware / really cheap webpage
> and website editor [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
>
>
>
> I
> 've been using HTML-Kit, which you can download free from http://www.chami.com/html-kit/, for years. It's
> an HTML editor, not a WYSIWIG editor, so
> you'd only use it if you prefer to code your own webpages in 'raw' HTML (as you'd
> obviously have to with Notepad). However, unlike Notepad++,
> it's designed specifically for editing HTML and related pages (XHTML, CSS, PHP and JavaScript, etc), so contains many aids to help you get the syntax right, as well as colour coding (Notepad++ supports other languages too, which could be a benefit, but also means less specific help for the languages you need for webpages). And you can also easily upload files to the server by drag and drop.

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