Good tools for creating tables, including CSS setup, recommendations?
Chris G
cl at isbd.net
Thu Feb 12 21:13:27 UTC 2009
On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 12:27:50PM -0800, NoOp wrote:
> On 02/12/2009 05:34 AM, Chris G wrote:
>
> >
> > However I *think* I have found an alternative that works for me,
> > there's an alpha version of Kompozer available which has fixed the
> > crashing inherent in version 0.7.10 (due to an incompatibility with
> > GTK 2.14), if anyone is interested it's here:-
> >
> > http://downloads.sourceforge.net/kompozer/kompozer-20090206.tar.gz
> >
> > You just unpack it and run it so it doesn't mess up anything up too much.
> >
> > I'm running it at present and, while it has a few oddities, it doesn't
> > crash and it edits tables quite nicely. It has a built in CSS editor
> > so makes it fairly easy to set the borders as I want them.
> >
>
> It's built into SeaMonkey - full install & always has been:
>
> http://www.seamonkey-project.org/
> http://www.seamonkey-project.org/doc/features
>
Yes, I know, if you look at my original posting SeaMonkey was one of
the programs I tried. SeaMonkey has one big disadvantage compared
with Kompozer though, no CSS editor. I really need CSS to get the
tables looking the way I want. Kompozer is more than just the web
page editing part of SeaMonkey.
> Give that a try; you get email, browser, composer, & address book all in
> one. The yet to be released 2.x is even nicer:
> http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/seamonkey/nightly/latest-trunk/
> and can be run in parallel with 1.1.14.
>
> BTW: that is where komposer got it's roots:
> http://kompozer.net/about/
>
Yes, I know that too, I've been around the 'net for a long time.
--
Chris Green
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