What are some recommended Free software tools for making websites?

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Daemonax
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Joined: 09/30/2009

I've just been looking around and the two that caught my attention are:

Bluefish http://bluefish.openoffice.nl/index.html

And BlueGriffon http://bluegriffon.org/

Anyone familiar with either of these? Which is best? Are there other programs out there worth checking out?

Magic Banana

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Joined: 07/24/2010

For a simple website, there is KompoZer: http://kompozer.net

Personally I use... Emacs. :-)

gurdy
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Joined: 09/13/2009

On 07/31/2011 10:24 AM, name at domain wrote:
> I've just been looking around and the two that caught my attention are:
>
> Bluefish http://bluefish.openoffice.nl/index.html
>
> And BlueGriffon http://bluegriffon.org/
>
> Anyone familiar with either of these? Which is best? Are there other
> programs out there worth checking out?
>
Quanta Plus is my favorite.

Maqetta looks interesting: .

Cyberhawk

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I used to work in bluefish, but am slowly switching to simply kate. Kate is better, because it has all the functions I need (switching between many different files in one session, syntax highlighting for HTML and CSS) and starts faster than bluefish even in gnome. That's for the test editor.

If you want to make dynamic sites, with blogs and articles and such, there are lots of engines like wordpress and joomla, or drupal.

Personally I find it most productive to use an engine, but to write your own template with HTML and CSS, so that you get the full functionality of an engine, with a 100% custom looking website, like if you have written it all yourself, from the HTML to PHP and all the scripts.

Adrian Malacoda

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I used to use bluefish a lot but I ended up moving to geany. Geany seems to blend in more with the Gnome environment and seems to behave more predictably sometimes (e.g. try to select a block of text and indent it. In geany it's just the standard tab key, in bluefish it's Ctrl+period or something like that).

I don't normally use WYSIWYG editors. I tried Kompozer to edit my new Wordpress site layout and found it didn't render it very accurately. BlueGriffon seems to be more accurate in this regard. For the record, BlueGriffon is the "official" successor to Nvu (which Kompozer is a fork of).

Magic Banana

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That is true. Now, KompoZer probably is irrelevant (and, indeed, it does not seem to be developed anymore). I have not tried BlueGriffon yet. What worries me is the collection of proprietary add-ons that BlueGriffon recommends (at least on their website).

Cyberhawk

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when I try to install geany aptitude tells me the following packages will be removed: linux-headers-2.6.35-28{u} linux-headers-2.6.35-28-generic{u}

That doesn't seem right, is it possible I screwed up something in my system?

Mampir
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Joined: 12/16/2009

I think it's safe, because your current version of Linux should be
2.6.35-30, not 2.6.35-28. Aptitude is just cleaning old and unused
packages. It did the same on my system recently.

Cyberhawk

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Joined: 07/27/2010

Alright! Geany seems to be a good tool, thanks for the hint Adrian.

t3g
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Joined: 05/15/2011

I'm a fan of Aptana Studio 3 running on top of OpenJDK

Adrian Malacoda

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Joined: 12/26/2010

I've used that before. It's more or less Eclipse tailored to web development, as far as I can see. Eclipse is a bit heavy for my taste.

t3g
t3g
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Joined: 05/15/2011

Yeah, the memory usage of anything built upon the Eclipse platform is out of control. I guess Java is to blame? lol