~terry
Wed, Jul 24, 1996 (11:43)
seed
Kenn Nesbitt's WebEdit -- The latest release of WebEdit has
arrived with several well-appreciated new features and improved
support for many of the old features, including additional proposed
HTML 3.0 tags (math functions, icon entities, tables, and full
support for the latest tags from Netscape 2.0 and Internet Explorer
2.0), a Home Page Wizard (which may well rival even WebWizard
for ease of use), server side include tags, improved web browser
support, and much more. Additionally, WebEdit now includes a
URL Builder for easy selection of URLs, a Table Builder for rapid
creation of advanced tables, a built-in WYSIWYG previewer for
viewing HTML pages from within the editor (the previewer does
not yet accept HTML 3.0 tags, though), and a new WYSIWYG
image mapping utility for quickly developing high-quality image
maps. WebEdit also saves every URL you enter, letting you choose
from a list rather than having to retype the same URLs over and
over. Also included are a tool for removing HTML tags from a
document and a tool for quickly producing a template of tags
commonly used in HTML documents. WebEdit also features MDI
-- multiple-document interface -- which allows you to work on up
to ten different HTML documents simultaneously.
As in most other HTML editors, there is an option for calling your
favorite web browser to view the current page. Additional features
include word wrap, time/date stamping, search and replace, and
almost every HTML command imaginable. WebEdit even allows
you to create user-defined tags. Many of WebEdit's features are
now found in less expensive HTML Editors like HTML Easy Pro
and HotDog. WebEdit does have some very interesting new
features, like floating customizable toolbars, the Table Builder, and
a multilingual spelling checker (American English, British, Dutch,
French, German, Italian, and Spanish); unfortunately, all of these
features are crippled in the evaluation package, so users will likely
have a difficult time determining whether WebEdit is worth the
$79.95 list price. While sporting more features than HTML Writer,
WebEdit does have one drawback that keeps it from taking the
crown -- at just under $80 (but only $40 for non-commercial use),
WebEdit can't match HTML Writer's donation-ware status or
HotDog's inexpensive price coupled with superior overall ease of
use and extensive set of features. Still, with each new release
WebEdit takes a giant leap forward in narrowing the gap and may
well reach and surpass HotDog in the near future.
Professional vs. Standard versions: The 32-bit release of WebEdit is
offered in two different versions. The Professional release
incorporates all of the features of the Standard version in addition
to adding projects support, an integrated HTML tag checker,
colored tag highlighting, FTP Upload capabilities, a Tables of
Content Wizard, WYSIWYG Frame and Form Wizards, and
support for future WebEdit add-ons. The Professional version costs
just under $110, while the Standard release can be obtained for less
than half of that.
Pros: Great collection of features, includes proposed HTML tags
and user-defined tags
Cons: Relatively expensive price tag, not as easy to use as HotDog
New: Enhanced WYSIWYG Previewer and Image Map editor,
FTP Uploading, Frames Wizard, more
Version Reviewed: Standard - 2.0. Pro - 2.0 Pre-Release
Date of Review: 7/6/96 Reviewer: Forrest Stroud
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