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HotDog is an HTML editor developed by Sausage Software in the mid-1990s. [1] At the time of its development, there were only a small number of HTML editors available on the market (such as HoTMetaL) and HotDog gathered significant interest due to its ease of use. The program was developed by the New Zealand Internet entrepreneur Steve Outtrim. [2]
The editor had several views (including text and WYSIWYG), most notably the "Tags-On" view. This provided a WYSIWYG-like view of the page being edited with overlay icons showing where the code tags started and ended. This view is still used in the XML editing module of Adobe InDesign. "About" popup window for SoftQuad's MetalWorks image editor.
SoftQuad Software, Ltd., was a Canadian software company best known for HoTMetaL, [1] the first commercial HTML editor. [2] [3] [4] It is also known for Author/Editor, the first specialized SGML editor, [5] and Panorama, the first browser plugin for SGML. [6]
Library to create and manipulate PDF, RTF, HTML files in Java, C#, and other .NET languages. JasperReports: GNU LGPL: Open-source Java reporting tool that can write to screen, printer, or into PDF, HTML, Microsoft Excel, RTF, ODT, comma-separated values and XML files. libHaru: ZLIB/LIBPNG: Open-source, cross-platform C library to generate PDF ...
HTML editors that support What You See Is What You Get paradigm provide a user interface similar to a word processor for creating HTML documents, as an alternative to manual coding. [1] Achieving true WYSIWYG however is not always possible.
Sausage Software was an Australian software company, founded by entrepreneur Steve Outtrim, which produced one of the world's most successful web editors: the HotDog web authoring tool. [4] The product and company name have since been purchased by an Australian consulting firm, SMS Management & Technology.
PDFescape is an advertising- and fee-supported PDF editor program written in JavaScript, HTML, CSS and ASP. It has an online and Windows version. It features PDF editing, form filling, page arrangement, printing, saving, and form publishing. A premium ad free version is available for a fee. Form publishing requires additional fees.
Some editors use div elements for their content area. This way the editor content inherits the same style as the rest of the page, because it is in the same document. This approach is mainly used when the users need to edit content "in-place", preserving the overall layout of the page. Examples of such "in-place" editors are the DotNetNuke CMS.