Wysiwyg Text Editor (for webpage)?

TinyMCE is pretty widely used and allows some pretty decent configuration and has a good user community. Stackoverflow uses WMD (see the SO Blog post at blog.stackoverflow.com/2008/05/potential... ).

TinyMCE is pretty widely used and allows some pretty decent configuration and has a good user community. Stackoverflow uses WMD (see the SO Blog post at blog.stackoverflow.com/2008/05/potential...).

1 I would suggest going for WYSIHat. Its a framework for WYSIWIG Editors and is backed by the design savvy company 37signals. TinyMCE is extremely bloated and hard to customize.37signals.Com/svn/posts/… – Shripad K Apr 19 '10 at 3:55.

JHtmlArea - WYSIWYG HTML Editor for jQuery A simple, light weight, extensible WYSIWYG HTML Editor built on top of jQuery. This component allows you to easily display a WYSIWYG HTML Editor in place of any TextArea DOM Elements on the page. The minified script alone is 7kb, and with css and image files it's a total of 15kb.

This project also include Visual Studio JavaScript Intellisense support.

I've used FCKEditor and TinyMCE, which are free and work really well as pure WYSIWYG HTML editors. TinyMCE seems a bit more customizable and themeable, so it may work better for you if you're pushing for simple. It's very easy to integrate in your site.

Try looking at the source for stackoverflow to see what they are using. Here's some JavaScript based HTML / WYSIWYG editors: fckeditor.net/ tinymce.moxiecode.com.

Here is an (X)HTML compliant WYSIWYG editor. It's very small at only 13kb, unless you style the controls then it's 20kb. Implemented using javascript, I would take a look if you are not satisfied yet.It's just one JS and one CSS file, and just a few images.

This script uses the Microsoft designMode DOM extension and is written in ECMAScript edition 3. It has been tested and works in Internet Explorer 5.5+ and Mozilla 1.3+ based browsers (including Firefox and Camino) but should also work in any browser that support designMode.(X)HTML Compliant WYSIWYG Editor.

Check out SPAW Editor. It supports IE6 + all the other majors browsers and there's a PHP4 back-end.

One I use is nicedit but only hasn't been updated in about 6 months and there is next to no documentation. TinyMCE seems bloated (tinymce == 700 odd files to upload ... and everytime its run (i get about 20odd http requests) ) ... nicedit is just two files, . Js and .

Gif so thats my pick.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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