Drupal theme development environment in Dreamweaver

How do you define sites in Dreamweaver for creating and Drupal theme with Themegine? Dreamweaver is a rich HTML and CSS editor. By and far this software has been in the front position among web authoring softwares. In it's latest versions CS4 and CS5 Adobe introduced new features that makes CMS themes. Key features like Related file, Live view, CSS inspect and CSS enable/disable are true time savers a cool experience for CMS theme developers.

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Konductor releases extension on the Adobe Dreamweaver Exchange

Andrew Odri's picture
Submitted by Andrew Odri on

There have been a number of pretty cool things happening at Konductor recently:

Check out the website if you would like some more information. If you want to keep track of updates or ask a quick question, you may want to follow Konductor on twitter.

New website and updated videos for Konductor CMS

The Konductor team has rolled out their new website, and it is looking quiet slick. They also now have sections that address some of the features that Konductor offers for designers, developers and end users in more detail. You can check it out here: http://www.konductor.net/

Also, there is a bunch of new videos on their YouTube channel, check them out here:

Daniel Glazman, Mozilla Composer, and Nvu's future

Bryan's picture
Submitted by Bryan on

I have been sitting on this story for some time. Daniel Glazman has been writing a number of posts recently on a brand new project he's just starting. Daniel Glazman was involved in the development of the Netscape and Mozilla Composer (now called SeaMonkey) as well as the author of the Nvu Web authoring system. All these composers contain a WYSIWYG HTML editor and in many ways can be the considered the open source versions of Microsoft's Frontpage and Adobe's Dreamweaver.

I personally like to use Nvu now and then. I often recommend Nvu to those that need an easy way to compose Web pages and wish to avoid "writing in code" as much as possible. I don't use Nvu or any WYSISYG editor too much these days because I have found that about everything I need to produce online content is self contained with today's content management systems. However, there are times when you don't want to do your work online, making the HTML editors a valuable tool when you need them.

Getting back to the point of this post, Daniel Glazeman has made several posts on his blog letting readers know that he is no longer working with either Nvu or the SeaMonkey projects. Instead, he wishes to work on a brand new composer. In a post he writes: