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It's so freeking annoying to paste code and it spaces over over the whole block and so on, it consumes almost the same time as writing the article itself but thanks for suggesting asking for help
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Hi Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter,
I have use the new editor to publish my new article and you were 100% right that it is better.
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Nice article
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is. (V)
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I write all my articles offline and use email submission. No muss, no fuss, no hassle.
You'll never get very far if all you do is follow instructions.
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Hi,
I wrote my article offline but in Open Office and exported it as a .Pdf , but perhaps its an idea to just send it by email
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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You can download the skeleton article and build it offline using that, then submit as a Zip file. Takes a bit longer to get published but it tends to work.
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Hi Richard,
I downloaded the CodeProjectArticleEditor.exe from Huseyin Atasoy , it looks promising
Thanks for the advise
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Eric Goedhart wrote: in the online editor
I know I'm archaic, but I write all my articles in FrontPage and just paste the HTML into the online editor. At most, I use it to add "code" tags.
Marc
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Hi Mark,
FrontPage sounds familiar but no clue what it was except something from MS in the past I think
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Eric Goedhart wrote: FrontPage sounds familiar but no clue what it was except something from MS in the past I think
Quite so. It used to be the way people published static web pages. I still like it as an article editor because of it's split view (HTML / text) but there's more modern editors that do the same thing.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: It used to be the way people who did not know how to write HTML published static web pages. It would turn even simple pages into monstrosities with multiple tables embedded within tables. embedded within tables, ...
FTFY
Marc Clifton wrote: I still like it because I can watch the poor slob assigned to update the page struggle to do even simple things like add a control onto a page some graphic artist slapped together and passed off as a web page.
FTFY
<rant>
Sorry I just had to vent. I used to do some contract work for a web video company* and they hired this graphic artist to put a new face on their web site. Needless to say she couldn't do simple things like add a video to the page, something essential for a web video company to have, so I would have to wade through tons of really crap code to find where I could add the control.
</rant>
* - I used to package completed videos and video players for their clients so they could drop them on their web pages with a minimum of effort.
Did I mention that I hate Frontpage.
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
I'm on-line therefore I am.
JimmyRopes
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I don't like the online editor either (though to be fair I haven't written an article for long enough it is probably better now), so I write the article as plain HTML in a text editor (Notepad++, these days) and then paste it in.
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I agree. I would rather use NotePad to edit the raw HTML.
I'd be surprised if anyone used it for anything longer than a paragraph.
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Hi,
You know HTML5 has these <Article></Article> tags and so on... I think it would be faster to write an article that way
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Steve Wellens wrote: I'd be surprised if anyone used it for anything longer than a paragraph.
All my articles have been written entirely* with Notepad.
* Excepting that the code wasn't written in Notepad; however, I do the < and > replacements in Notepad.
You'll never get very far if all you do is follow instructions.
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H Dave,
Thanks for the Link, I downloaded that Offline Editor and have a look at it
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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If it's any consolation, I still spend more time swearing at the article editor (and repairing the damage it did) than I do writing the articles!
I tend to switch it to HTML mode and use it as a "glorified notepad with a preview button" as it annoys me a lot less that way...
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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Haha,
I just moved recently to Amsterdam (an apartment block) and this afternoon when I was working with the Editor I was saying words my new neighbours perhaps wouldn't appreciate and possibly could hear ,when I realised that I made myself a cup of coffee and calmed down When the anger again came up I wrote this post
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Fortunately, the walls here are 60cm thick and made of granite, so very little gets through them - and certainly no sound!
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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So, what you're saying is, in OG's house, no one can hear you bleat!
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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OriginalGriff wrote: the walls here are 60cm thick
Hey, you never mentioned that you live in a castle (or does everybody in Wales do ?)
~RaGE();
I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus
Entropy isn't what it used to.
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It's not a castle, it's a cottage! But it's a couple hundred years old, and it's built of local materials: "riverstone", which is basically granite that has been dragged down from the mountains by the river and bashed so many times it's probably harder than diamond...
Because it's hard, you don't cut or split it unless you really, really have to - so the walls have to be thick to support themselves. Worse, they use a lime mortar which you can't cover with a modern plaster because it needs to breathe.
It means they are cool in summer, and once heated - which takes a lot - warm in winter. And they will probably still be here in another couple of hundred years, which modern building methods don't encourage...
The downsides are the line mortar, complete absence of right angles or straight lines, and that just putting up a shelf needs industrial strength drilling equipment and a lot of luck! When the neighbours had an extension, the builder wore out two water-cooled diamond cutting discs before giving up on cutting a door hole and demolished a chunk of wall instead...
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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This is great ! Totally sounds like somewhere I would love to live !
~RaGE();
I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus
Entropy isn't what it used to.
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