Technical Help & Discussion > Website Design & Programming

Macromedia Dreamweaver MX

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twiggy:
Sorry Adept i must disagree i have Dreamweaver, front page and namo web editors installed on my comp. By far the best is Namo very easy for beginners and great for more advance web designers. Its only an opinion but i think namo is loads better.

Mark

Simon:
Don't think Adept's ignoring you, Mark - he's on holiday for a fortnight.   :)

Sandra:
I am glad you mentioned Namo Mark,as thats the only one that I have used (I havent done much with it yet),but it seemed fairly straight forward,I have various versions of Dream Weaver but have never got around to installing any of them yet to try them out  :-*

Adept:
When I first started designing web-sites, I also thought that FrontPage and other web editors were far superior to Dreamweaver. I just couldn't get my head around the way it worked, only ever having been exposed to Microsoft's software previously.

But it was only really because I was inexperienced in HTML and web design that I didn't appreciate the power and, more importantly, standards compliance of the Macromedia product.

If you are fiddling about with one or two pages, use what you feel comfortable using [notepad is probably best ;)]- if you are designing a professional multipage website, it's definitely worth the effort learning how to use Dreamweaver. It is far more than just a web editor :)

Michelle:
Just been having a look through these threads, but I am not certain from what people say as to which is the easiest for a beginner to start on.

Is it the cutesite one?  :-\

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