Adobe
Dreamweaver is a web development application originally
created by Macromedia and now owned by Adobe Systems, which
acquired Macromedia in 2005.Dreamweaver is available for
both Mac and Windows operating systems. Recent versions
have incorporated support for web technologies such as CSS,
JavaScript, and various server-side scripting languages
and frameworks including ASP.NET, ColdFusion, JavaServer
Pages, and PHP.
Features
:
As
a WYSIWYG Presto-based editor, Dreamweaver can hide the
details of pages' HTML code from the user, making it possible
for non-coders to create web pages and sites. A professional
criticism of this approach is that it produces HTML pages
whose file size and amount of HTML code is much larger than
they should be, which can cause web browsers to perform
poorly. This can be particularly true because the application
makes it very easy to create table-based layouts. In addition,
some web site developers have criticized Dreamweaver in
the past for producing code that often does not comply with
W3C standards, though recent versions have been more compliant.
Dreamweaver 8.0 performed poorly on the Acid2 Test, developed
by the Web Standards Project. However, Macromedia has increased
the support for CSS and other ways to lay out a page without
tables in later versions of the application, with the ability
to convert tables to layers and vice versa.
Dreamweaver
allows users to preview websites in many browsers, provided
that they are installed on their computer. It also has some
site management tools, such as the ability to find and replace
lines of text or code by whatever parameters specified across
the entire site, and a templatization feature for creating
multiple pages with similar structures. The behaviors panel
also enables use of basic JavaScript without any coding
knowledge.
Dreamweaver
can use "Extensions" - small programs, which any
web developer can write (usually in HTML and JavaScript).
Extensions provide added functionality to the software for
whomever wants to download and install them. Dreamweaver
is supported by a large community of extension developers
who make extensions available (both commercial and free)
for most web development tasks from simple rollover effects
to full-featured shopping carts.
Like
other HTML editors, Dreamweaver edits files locally, then
uploads all edited files to the remote web server using
FTP, SFTP, or WebDAV.
Syntax highlighting :
As
of version 6, Dreamweaver supports syntax highlighting for
the following languages out of the box:
ActionScript
Active Server Pages (ASP)
ASP.NET
C#
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)
ColdFusion
EDML
Extensible HyperText Markup Language (XHTML)
Extensible Markup Language (XML)
Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations (XSLT)
Java
JavaScript
JavaServer Pages (JSP)
PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP)
Visual Basic (VB)
Visual Basic Script Edition (VBScript)
Wireless Markup Language (WML)
It is also possible to add your own language syntax highlighting
to its repertoire.
In
addition, code completion is available for many of these
languages.