[SGVLUG] Website Testing
Dustin
laurence at alice.caltech.edu
Wed Jul 20 16:09:15 PDT 2005
On Wed, 20 Jul 2005, Emerson, Tom wrote:
> ouch -- we're "boring" -- no wonder attendance is down ;)
Yah, it isn't a big deal, but actually I think the page *is* boring.
That may be OK (my current page is very boring too) for us, I don't know,
but it would be pretty embarassing for something like Webspinners or a
Plone user's group. :-)
> That's one of the secrets -- you need to consider an HTML page to be "code",
It is just stunning to me that anyone capable of writing an editor would
*not* regard documents as readable code. I understood that from about ten
seconds after I first saw TeX....
For the commercial editors, I actually think they have some vested
interest in it *not* being readable. Why would they do even a little work
to reduce your dependence on their tool? Lock-in is where it's at.
> The problem with using "just a plain text editor" is that once you get
> to "more than one person doing the work" [or even "one person using more
> than one computer"], you need to invest in a revision-control mechanism
> of some sort anyway -- otherwise you'll get changes overwritten by "the
> other guy with the older version of the page..."
In the case of people who have shell access to the machine, even RCS would
work.
Dustin
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