Existing users, log in.  New users, create a free account.  Lost password?

Mac OS X  |  Web & Software Development  |  HTML / Text Editors  |  SEEdit Maxi II  |  Great Start

SEEdit Maxi II

SEEdit Maxi II

XHTML, HTML, CSS and RSS 2.0 editor & syntax checker.

Version:  2009.12.03

   [ Views: 1507 ]

Great Start

Feedback Type:  Review

Contributed by: rcatlow Thursday, July 21 2005 @ 11:00 AM PDT

Product Platform: MacOSX

Used Product For: Less than a month

Recommend Product: YES

I'm really liking this editor...one thing that would be great is auto-suggest. When you start typing a tag it could suggest the tag you want based on the letter you start with. Dreamweaver has this feature and i really like it, but dreamweaver is such a heavy app to use for just hardcoding.   
Overall Rating:

Ease of Use:

Support:

Features:

Quality / Stability:

Price:

5 of 5 users found this helpful.

Rate this Review

Was this Review helpful? Yes | No

Comments

5 comments |

Great Start - Sven_E_Olsson_724

Thanks for your feedback!!
If you like SEEdit Mini, you are welcome to enjoy
the SEEdit Forum....

Have you tested my support??

Have a nice time,
Sven E Olsson
Developer of SEEdit

Reply to This

Thursday, July 21 2005 @ 02:16 PM PDT


Feature wanted! - Enricof

Tags auto-completion is the single most wanted feature for many of us, I guess!
Since I usually make a lot of typos writing, with Dreamweaver auto-completion of tags (and parameters... many time is difficult to remember less used params) even I, a graphic designer. can produce good code.
Otherwise I can loose hours looking for stupid single-letter errors, very hard to find.
I haven't found until now an html editor capable of auto-completion, not in the freeware, not in the shareware. Even the feature-full BBedit cannot do this.
It must be something very hard to code, I guess, if it's so rare.

Reply to This

Friday, July 22 2005 @ 02:17 AM PDT


Feature wanted! - Tony Walton

Have you tried jEdit from http://jedit.org ?

It does context-sensitive auto-completion (context-sensitive so it's bright enough not to present <head> as a tag if you're in the <body> when you type <h for example), auto-closing of tags (hit </ and it'll complete it with the syntactically-correct tag to be closed), syntax colouring etc. Double click on a tag and it presents a menu of allowed attributes for the tag (with required ones marked), and so on. Get a few plugins and it does XLST transforms, it'll run the W3C "tidy" tidier-upper, XML syntax checking, you name it (these are optional plugins so if you don't want them don't download them).

And it's open-source freeware.

Reply to This

Friday, September 30 2005 @ 10:40 AM PDT


Great Start - estherart

very good

Reply to This

Friday, March 03 2006 @ 05:06 PM PST


Great Start - estherart

very good

Reply to This

Friday, March 03 2006 @ 05:06 PM PST