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From: Erik Richard Sørensen on 20 Feb 2010 09:23 John wrote: > Nevermind Text Wrangler or Komposer I think Sea Monkey will do what I > need. If you mean HTML / web writing/editing, yes, SeaMonkey is quite good for this. I use it myself for editing/translating help files from the various applications that I translate. The good about SeaMonkey is that you can work fully HTML as well as fully WYSIWYG. Cheers, Erik Richar -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <mac-manNOSP(a)Mstofanet.dk> NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com OpenOffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: Jolly Roger on 20 Feb 2010 10:55 In article <jwolf6589-485340.00012220022010(a)nntp.charter.net>, John <jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote: > Nevermind Text Wrangler or Komposer I think Sea Monkey will do what I > need. Why not Freeway? -- Send responses to the relevant news group rather than email to me. E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my very hungry SPAM filter. Due to Google's refusal to prevent spammers from posting messages through their servers, I often ignore posts from Google Groups. Use a real news client if you want me to see your posts. JR
From: Erik Richard Sørensen on 20 Feb 2010 14:16 John wrote: > Erik Richard Sørensen <NOSPAM(a)NOSPAM.dk> wrote: >> John wrote: >>> Nevermind Text Wrangler or Komposer I think Sea Monkey will do what I >>> need. >> If you mean HTML / web writing/editing, yes, SeaMonkey is quite good for >> this. I use it myself for editing/translating help files from the >> various applications that I translate. The good about SeaMonkey is that >> you can work fully HTML as well as fully WYSIWYG. > > Can it verify links before upload? ON CERM when I work on a file I wish > to verify the links to make sure they are correct before upload. Claris > Home Page 3.x allowed this and also it allowed me to upload to my FTP > server without relying on Fetch. Can Sea Monkey as well? Yes, you can with the composer part, - I do the same when/if I insert links into text or also verify already inserted links. It can also verify 'inline' in a HTML document. - Just save the document, double-click on it and links are shown with underlining as standard. Doubl-clicking on a link will take you to the place it belongs to - no matter if it's inside the document, another file in a folder or on the internet. Cheers, Erik Richard -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <mac-manNOSP(a)Mstofanet.dk> NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com OpenOffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: Erik Richard Sørensen on 20 Feb 2010 14:21 Erik Richard Sørensen wrote: > John wrote: >> Erik Richard Sørensen <NOSPAM(a)NOSPAM.dk> wrote: >>> John wrote: >>>> Nevermind Text Wrangler or Komposer I think Sea Monkey will do what >>>> I need. >>> If you mean HTML / web writing/editing, yes, SeaMonkey is quite good >>> for this. I use it myself for editing/translating help files from the >>> various applications that I translate. The good about SeaMonkey is >>> that you can work fully HTML as well as fully WYSIWYG. >> >> Can it verify links before upload? ON CERM when I work on a file I >> wish to verify the links to make sure they are correct before upload. >> Claris Home Page 3.x allowed this and also it allowed me to upload to >> my FTP server without relying on Fetch. Can Sea Monkey as well? > > Yes, you can with the composer part, - I do the same when/if I insert > links into text or also verify already inserted links. It can also > verify 'inline' in a HTML document. - Just save the document, > double-click on it and links are shown with underlining as standard. > Doubl-clicking on a link will take you to the place it belongs to - no > matter if it's inside the document, another file in a folder or on the > internet. Ups! - "Yes, you can with the composer part," must of course be... "Yes, you can with the browser part of SeaMonkey". Cheers, Erik Richard -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <mac-manNOSP(a)Mstofanet.dk> NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com OpenOffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: Erik Richard Sørensen on 20 Feb 2010 23:44 John wrote: > Erik Richard Sørensen <NOSPAM(a)NOSPAM.dk> wrote: >> If you then have mark the word 'here' you just go to the menu 'Insert' >> in the SeaMonkey Composer, select 'Link...' and insert the email >> address. Click OK. The webpage will then underline 'here', but the >> address is hidden underneith the word 'here'. Clicking on 'here' will >> then open the default mail app with the email address in the 'To' field. >> >> And so you can do with other things on a page such as insering pictures >> that will pop up if clicked on a link, dialogs, other pages - or files >> if in an offline HTML folder like the 'Help' in an application. >> >> Btw. I like your 'design' with the classic OS 9 theme.:-) - Sad it isn't >> possible to use this with neither Leopard nor SnowLeopard... >> >> Cheers, Erik Richard > > I am talking about verifying links not inserting links. I know how to > insert a link. I dont think Sea Monkey does what I ask, oh well. > > I am using Snow Leopard and using OS 9. As I've already written... When you've inserted the link and saved it, just close the composer file and double-click on it again and it'll open in the SeaMonkey _browser_ part, I.e. make the page with the inserted links in the SeaMonkey Composer. save it and close it. Open the page by double-clicking it in the place where you've put it and it'll open in SeaMonkey if this is your default browser. then click on the link, and this will open the page from that link - online if it's on the web, offline if it's in a local folder with othr pages for the same webpage or help folder. So yes, SeaMonkey will do it. - If the link isnot correct you will get a message telling you that "...File xxxx can not be found" if it's local or "...The page xxxx can not be found", if it's online, - in both cases maybe also followed by error code 404, 500 or 550. If the links are correct the corresponding pages will open locally or online. Cheers, Erik Richard -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Erik Richard Sørensen, Member of ADC, <mac-manNOSP(a)Mstofanet.dk> NisusWriter - The Future In Multilingual Text Processing - www.nisus.com OpenOffice.org - The Modern Productivity Solution - www.openoffice.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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