My first web page was back around 1994, hand coded, learning HTML by trial and error. In retrospect we had things easy.
That was followed by a number of years of Dreamweaver, a program that worked very, very well for me for some moderately big sites, then later several years of Wordpress based sites because it was fast and easy.
It's time again to upgrade our sites, and what I'm hoping to find is an open-source package that will do what Dreamweaver did, but bring that ease of use into an age of CMS and responsive design. My specific goals are below.
[More after the break.]
Ultimately I guess what I'm looking for is the Holy Grail - a program or application that will let me get something professional up and running fairly fast, then leave lots of room for tweaking and improving any and all aspects of it.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by VLM on Monday December 28 2015, @01:03PM
That's a good answer, but in addition, draw a venn diagram thingy where "after I cross this line of adding numerous extensions and addons, I've basically reimplemented mediawiki the very hard way so wipe and install vanilla mediawiki". And all the other alternatives of course.
Radiant shows a general design pattern fail of "we're not as complicated as the other guys but we have 50 bazillion addons you can zoo keeper / cat herder over to turn our simple thing into something far more complicated and labor required than our supposedly too complicated competition that does all that in vanilla with no extensions". Vanilla Radiant's main selling point is vanilla is easy, but in practice after people add 50 extensions its worse than just starting over with something complicated. Can't increase simplicity by adding stuff.
I guess by analogy given extremely flexible tools and infinite hardware power, its possible to emulate everything, but its not necessarily a good business idea to emulate everything when you could just install the real thing and be simpler/faster.
(Score: 2) by marcello_dl on Tuesday December 29 2015, @12:49AM
Yes, in practice you have the "tame the big CMS but live happily ever after" vs the "port html exactly as is, take advantage of the framework as much as you need, but tame the possible extensions pool later".
There still are two pluses in the second approach, first that your existing HTML/JS/CSS/PHP skills have more headroom with minimal frameworks. Don't want to use "layouts", "snippets"? No prob. Second, that when the minimal framework upgrades it usually doesn't change as much as big CMS do, or at least have done in recent years.