IDE for jsp and html? - html

I would normally use Visual Studio for web development, but I don't think it works with JSP, so I need to use something else - what do you recommend?
I would like to use CSS too.

Netbeans is nice and its free!
Netbeans

Lot of opinions and experiences were presented What is a good Jsp IDE maybe this could help you.

I just use Notepad++ for everything. I would recommend Eclipse.

Related

Recommendations for good html & css editors? (Web Application)

Is there any good html & css editors in a web application? And I don't mean those like dreamweaver and eclipse. I mean like those editors stackoverflow uses when asking a question. I tried find for html editor online, but most of the editors don't support css. Does anyone know any good ones? Preferably to be used for Ruby-on-Rails! :)
I only use it in one place, but CKeditor has been pretty good. It integrates well with RailsAdmin, which is what I use it for. Look for the ckeditor gem.
You can use https://github.com/Nerian/bootstrap-wysihtml5-rails
I truly love TinyMCE. It's the editor that ships with WordPress, but it can be installed by itself. It is highly configurable, supports css, and is quite powerful.
There are two versions, a javascript version and a jquery version, so it can be installed with any server technology, but there is also a TinyMCE gem for rails.

HTML editor - A free alternative to DreamWeaver

In the past, I used to work with DW4 and liked the way it allows you to visually write HTML pages.
Can anyone suggest a free alternative for Windows?
Visual Studio does HTML editing and it's not bad. http://www.microsoft.com/express/Web/
If you don't mind using something experimental, why not try a nightly of BlueGriffon?
www.bluegriffon.org/
Try Bluefish and KompoZer from the World of FOSS..:)
Try this. Was ok for me before a got CS4.
http://www.pagebreeze.com/

IDE with HTML closing tag highlighting similar to closing brace

Is there an IDE that highlights each HTML closing tag (as you highlight over the opening tag, for example), similar to how many IDE's highlight where the opening/closing braces are for functions and such?
There are quite many IDEs that can do that and it's only up to you which one will you choose.
For example I often use NetBeans and Eclipse for HTML+CSS and PHP, sometime VisualStudio (for ASP.NET). For very fast editing, or something small I use Notepad++. All of them supports highlighting closing and beginning tags when marked. Also Dreamweaver is good for HTML, but I prefer to use OpenSource or freeware software (except for Visual Studio, but Express editions are also available free of charge).
So as you can see there are many options. I have to say that Notepad++ is quite powerful tool, very hight customizable, but for bigger HTML projects I use NetBeans due to it's code completion, syntax highlighting and other useful tools.
Regards,
Ventus
There is NotePad++ amongst many other for sure.
Zend Studio does this as well, so I'm assuming Eclipse PDT has it.
Yes lots, you can use notepad++, aptana if you have a better machine, pspad
if you can use aptana and add the ftp site so you can have full access of everything ;)

is there any Eclipse plug-in for WYSIWYG html editing/creating?

it's a very easy question maybe, but i can't find any "working" plug in for WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) HTML editing ,you know like dream weaver
i'm developing a web site which is a mix of php and python, coding is comfortable but designing is very hard with out such a plug in
thnx :)
Havn't tried it, but MyEclipse has an visual HTML designer. Maybe it's sufficient for your needs?
http://www.myeclipseide.com/
http://www.myeclipseide.com/images/tutorials/demos/html_designer_snap/html_designer_snap.htm

What to replace FrontPage with?

I use FrontPage for two different tasks; authoring html help and authoring a couple of websites. The websites don't require a lot of stuff -- they are there to disseminate a bit of information to a couple of small audiences.
FrontPage has been quick and easy for these tasks. WYSIWYG is good for these jobs and I like being able to click on links to quickly bring up other pages in the editor.
I've been exploring all sorts of options. tools that work online such as Kompozer make editing the html help difficult (at least, I haven't found a way around) and other html-level tools are just too much work. Tried nVu, Kompozer, Aptama, Komodo, Bluefish and so far, unless I'm missing something, I'm not sold on any of them.
I'm about to take a look at SeaMonkey but wondering if anybody has any recommendations. Or should I go back and look at those other tools again -- maybe I missed something?
Notepad++
I think the natural upgrade path would be Microsoft Expression Web.
People still use FrontPage?
I switched a couple of years back to DreamWeaver and never looked back.
Something to consider is that you could deploy these sites as wikis (which don't have to be publically editable) and edit them directly on the web in your browser. This would give you the ability to click around and do pretty much wysiwyg edits. It would also make it easier to maintain larger collections of data and to make new pages. You also don't really have to do any HTML at all because wikis mostly come pre-HTMLed (and CSSed and Javascripted), you just need to fill in the content.
I should note that this won't work if your webpages are deployed statically on a restrictive shared hosting account, but even most shared hosting supports installing things like wikis these days, so hopefully this is something you can look into.
I should also note that this probably isn't the best way to do local HTML help files, but if the HTML help is online, this is probably still a good choice.
I'm making this community wiki so others can add links to other wikis if they like or add more info on why you might want to or not want to use a wiki for this purpose.
Some wikis to consider:
MediaWiki - The wiki behind wikipedia
MoinMoin - Implemented in Python and popular in that community.
TiddlyWiki - Implemented in Javascript and runs on a single page. This is probably the most different wiki that's out there. Some love it, some hate it.
NVU and Kompozer both are best suited for you. NVU is my personal choice. Choose your poison. :)
FrontPage has been replaced by SharedPoint Designed in the Office suite.
You could also use Microsoft Expression Web if you can have it.
Drewamweaver or MS's Visual Studio/Web Developer Express will do the trick. They're both overkill (especially MS's tools).
I also think MS has (free) HTMLHelp. It's out there, but I don't know if it'll produce the files you need.
It depends on what kind of pages you are designing. If you are using Adobe Flash, Dreamweaver would be the best option but I would recommend "Microsoft Visual Web Developer Express". I am currently using it and totally love it from the bottom of my heart.
I'd say Dreamweaver, but last time I looked there was still bloated code, not as bad as the MX days mind.
Smashing Magazine has a list of WYSIWYG tools that would be worth a look :
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/05/06/25-wysiwyg-editors-reviewed/
I persuaded my friend to ditch Dreamweaver for NetBeans, took a week or so but I got a pint out of that :)
You might look into Aptana (http://aptana.org) which should provide everything you need. I think it even has a WYSIWYG editor, though I would really recommend learning html instead.
I would use Notepad++ for the simpler things, and Dreamweaver when working with other Adobe products. Notepad++ is simple and has a lot of great features. Dreamweaver is huge and will take some getting used to.
Try dokuwiki. I've implemented a wiki/manual/documentation for my app in a week. It's very simple n easy installing. You just need PHP, no database (mysql), the information is stored on files. Give it a try.
My wiki implemented wiki doku: wiki.vigo.com.br
Microsoft Visual Web Developer Express perhaps? http://www.microsoft.com/express/vwd/
Works well, and it's free!
Something similar to FrontPage is Adobe Contribute. It does cost $199, but if you're looking for something as simple as FrontPage, it may be a good option for you.
A freelancer web designer I work with will setup clients who want to make simple HTML edits to their sites with it and they've all been pretty happy. They're all non-technical people.
Dreamweaver is good, but however using the WYSIWYG may have problems getting consistency when viewing between IE, firefox and safari.