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Microsoft FrontPage (full name Microsoft Office FrontPage) is a discontinued WYSIWYG HTML editor and website administration tool from Microsoft for the Microsoft Windows line of operating systems. It was branded as part of the Microsoft Office suite from 1997 to 2003 .
Razor is an ASP.NET programming syntax used to create dynamic web pages with the C# or VB.NET programming languages. Razor was in development in June 2010 [4] and was released for Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 in January 2011. [5] Razor is a simple-syntax view engine and was released as part of MVC 3 and the WebMatrix tool set. [5]
Over time, software was created to help design web pages. For example, Microsoft released FrontPage in November 1995. By 1998, Dreamweaver had been established as the industry leader; however, some have criticized the quality of the code produced by such software as being overblown and reliant on HTML tables.
In 2017, at NDC Oslo, Steve Sanderson, Software engineer at Microsoft, unveiled [6] an experimental client-side web application framework for .NET that he called "Blazor". The demo involved an interactive app running in the browser using WebAssembly, and a rudimentary development experience in Visual Studio.
Microsoft Expression Web 2 was released in 2008. [6] Expression Web 2 offers native support for PHP and Silverlight. No service packs were released for version 2, but in December 2008 it received an update that fixed a problem that prevented macros from running on Windows Vista-based client computers. Microsoft Expression Web 3 was released in ...
Popfly Web Page creator. The Web Creator was a tool for creating Web pages. The user interface layout was similar to the ribbon user interface for Office 2007. Web pages were created without HTML coding, and could be customized by choosing predefined themes, styles, and color schemes. Users could embed their shared mashups in the Web page.
WYSIWYM (what you see is what you mean) is an alternative paradigm to WYSIWYG, in which the focus is on the semantic structure of the document rather than on the presentation.
Active Server Pages (ASP) is Microsoft's first server-side scripting language and engine for dynamic web pages. It was first released in December 1996, before being superseded in January 2002 by ASP.NET .