You could try mono(go-mono.com) as a framework, works pretty well. But I can't understand people who say vi is the best editor. No tips, no Intellisense, only a cool Notepad =)
Of course, if you don't want to use code-behind and you want to have intellisense, and you use VB.Net, mostly - - you might at least take a look at the 45 day trial of (ASP Express).....
I am working on Java Before and The JBuilder is The Excellent Tool. I have Moved to .Net reciently. I see the Visual Studio is good but not up to that level. Dreamweaver MX is also Very Good. But it Lakes Some Features. However If the Features of the Dreamweaver
and visualStudio are combined then This should be really excellent one.
Seems quite a lot of people like VS.NET. Has anyone tried VS.NET and Frontpage 2003. Do they play nice together? Would Frontpage 2003 be adequate for layout/graphics stuff? I've tried DW MX and VS.NET for different purposes on a single project. They didn't
get together along very well. Any opinion on FrontPage 2003?
Hi, I just wish to put my dollars worth in. I am not a high end level ASP.NET developer, infact im not a high end ASP developer. But I think a tool(editor) comes down to the following things: *the developers experience *the type of project (are you bulding
an amazon.com, a static home page type of site or juse something in between?) *the amount of "will" to do best practices now as i am sure you all know, the web is an ever overlapping realm where nothing is ever truely in its own domain(yes that point is arguable)
but if your going to do good practices I feel(think) that the base (or foundation) is the best place to start. So the question is, where does the foundation of the internet begin? is it server or client side? I think to best answer that is to go back to the
original defination of the internet...why was it created? it was created to share information.(althou it has grown into alot more then that now) so with that in mind, I think the base of the internet is HTML(or the more recent XHTML) now in order to do best
practices, then server side language that you use (any type that you use, i am not here to argue which is better asp.net, php, asp, perl, cgi, cfm etc) should display valid XHTML. and thankfull whidbey will be compliant appently... so back to the tool....i
feel a tool should be able to do standards compliant code. but this i feel comes back to the user and his "will" to do best practices... The whole point of this... best practices should be followed but the starting point (i feel..atleast until whidbey comes
out) is the xhtml side, and that the user should have a or atleast an understandble concept of xhtml set by the w3c i hope that i have not offended anyone by this post its just what i think should be the basis for a good tool and best practices. PWP www.abyss.ws
ps i hope this post made sense :)
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