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Editors that have been discontinued, but may still be in use or cited on published web pages Adobe Brackets; Adobe GoLive (replaced by Adobe Dreamweaver); Adobe Muse; Adobe PageMill (replaced by Adobe GoLive)
This article provides basic comparisons for notable text editors.More feature details for text editors are available from the Category of text editor features and from the individual products' articles.
Emacs, one of the first free and open-source software projects, is another early full-screen or real-time editor, one that was ported to many systems. [12] The 1977 Commodore PET was the first mass-market computer to feature a full-screen editor. A full-screen editor's ease-of-use and speed (compared to the line-based editors) motivated many ...
Microsoft Expression Web: Microsoft: 4.0.1460.0 2012-12-20 Proprietary: Microsoft Office FrontPage: Microsoft: 11.0.8174 2003-10-21 Proprietary: Microsoft FrontPage Express: Microsoft: 2.0 1997 Proprietary: Microsoft SharePoint Designer: Microsoft: 2007 2006-12-04 Proprietary: Microsoft Visual Studio Code: Microsoft: 1.95.3 [19] 2024-11-15 MIT ...
A web page (or webpage) is a document on the Web that is accessed in a web browser. [1] A website typically consists of many web pages linked together under a common domain name . The term "web page" is therefore a metaphor of paper pages bound together into a book.
WorldWideWeb (later renamed Nexus to avoid confusion between the software and the World Wide Web) is the first web browser [1] and web page editor. [2] It was discontinued in 1994. It was the first WYSIWYG HTML editor. The source code was released into the public domain on 30 April 1993.
Microsoft Windows XP/Vista/7/8, Web-based, Android Roam: Roam Research Proprietary commercial: macOS, Linux, Windows [1] Samsung Notes: Samsung Electronics: Proprietary commercial: Android, Windows Simplenote: Automattic inc. Clients: GPL-2.0-only: Web app: TagSpaces: TagSpaces UG AGPL-3.0-only: Web app: TiddlyWiki: Jeremy Ruston BSD-3-Clause
By December 1990, Berners-Lee and his work team had built all the tools necessary for a working Web: the HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP), the HyperText Markup Language (HTML), the first web browser (named WorldWideWeb, which was also a web editor), the first web server (later known as CERN httpd) and the first web site (https://info.cern.ch ...