Finding a Good HTML Editor
Once you've decided to write your own HTML, and you've got some
idea of how it all works, there's one thing left to think about:
which program are you going to use to do it? While you can use
programs like Notepad or Wordpad that come with Windows, they
don't have any specialised HTML editing features, and that can
slow you down more than you'd think.
The choice of HTML editors out there, though, is bewildering:
there are literally thousands. Here's a guide to things you
should look for when you're searching for your perfect HTML
partner.
Syntax Highlighting
One of the most vital features for any editor is syntax
highlighting. This means that it understands how HTML works, and
will make tags a different colour from text, making it easier
for you to see what you're doing.
You should try to find an editor that has up-to-date syntax
highlighting and checks whether your tags are valid or not.
Instead of just colouring anything you put between angle
brackets, it should check whether what you're entering is valid
HTML, and warn you if it isn't (usually by turning it red).
Another thing to look out for when it comes to syntax
highlighting is what the editor supports that you might want to
use with HTML: it's good to have highlighting for CSS and
Javascript, as well as PHP or Perl (or whatever you use
server-side). Some editors mark them in the same colour to
indicate 'not HTML', while some highlight them in a useful way -
this is what you want.
Tag Suggestion
It's good to get an editor that knows about valid HTML tags and
how they're structured, as that means it can let you know what
you should be including and let you browse through tags to find
the one you're thinking of. If you type '