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Posted by fitwell on 12/05/05 02:02
On Sun, 04 Dec 2005 11:34:14 -0500, "Jonathan N. Little"
<lws4art@centralva.net> wrote:
>Stan McCann wrote:
>
>> When I tested it, it changed code even with the setting set. Yes, it
>> was a deal killer. That, and the fact that it does not use, and they
>> have no plans to implement SSH. I have all of my servers using that
>> only, no FTP.
>
>
>Agreed, just tested and found that the option did not work, but then
>again I do not use a WYSIWYG editor. Works in Moz's Composer, but
>somehow the Nvu folks broke it when they added enhanced features
>
>>
>> I work with Ultra-Edit[1], when I hit the save button in a file I'm
>> working on direct from the server, it's saved direct to the server,
>> using SSH.
>>
>> [1] Much like Crimson Editor, but not free.
>
>I have v3.7 the latest and it's freeware. Now the author does accept
>donations, and this is one freeware product that deserves a donation,
>Roshal's WinRar is another.
>
>
> Crimson doesn't do SSH
>> either.
>
>Nope it doesn't but then I do not edit directly to 'published'
>documents. I work on a private development servers on my LAN then when
>I have tested and assured that everything is correct then I mirror to
>the public server with WS_FTP Pro. Helps 'minimize' boo-boos on line.
>WS_FTP Pro does support SSH.
I'm sorry but I missed the first messages in this thread. I
personally don't know what SSH is but in terms of WYSIWYG that doesn't
change code (at least, everything I've ever done has remained clean),
there's TSW Webcoder 4. There may be a later version out there but 4
is the one I know and use.
I love this editor and though I don't build from scratch often, have
used it when I need direct and WSIWYG input, it's my choice.
The bulk of what I do happens to be minor editing so it's just easier
for me to use Notepad in those cases, but there are times when I want
a wordprocessor-like interface with its immediate effects and this one
is great.
However, as mentioned, don't know if it does SSH since I don't know
what that is <g>. I've probably seen it but don't know the term
maybe.
If anyone tries this one and finds any major problems with it, pls
advise. I'd be curious to know.
Good luck!
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