Simple but decent web composition software

Jerry Feldman gaf at blu.org
Sun Jun 9 11:03:33 EDT 2013


On 06/09/2013 10:09 AM, Dan Coutu wrote:
> On 6/8/13 2:15 PM, Jerry Feldman wrote:
>> On 06/08/2013 01:55 PM, Chris Linstid wrote:
>>> On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 12:46 PM, Chris Linstid <clinstid at gmail.com
>>> <mailto:clinstid at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>>      At work I've been generating HTML reference documents for an API
>>>      and the references use CSS and JavaScript. I just take the whole
>>>      pile of HTML, js, and css files and copy them to Sharepoint (it's
>>>      the only cross-site resource we have at the moment, *sigh*). Since
>>>      it's just HTML, js, and css, the browser is able to pick
>>>      everything up properly and display everything as I specified it.
>>>
>>>
>>> Just to clarify, I mean that I upload the html, css, and js files to a
>>> document library and then go to:
>>> http://sharepoint/path/to/doc/library/api/index.html and access the
>>> files as if they were hosted on any other web server or local files.
>> Currently this is not in the document library. It uses Hot Events. I'm
>> not sure what the underlying widget supports. Butm when I log in the
>> only action I can do is to create a new event and enter the html.
>>
> I have good luck with using IBM's Symphony office suite to generate doc,
> spreadsheet, and presentation files that look good when viewed in
> Microsoft-land. Symphony is free and will run on multiple platforms that
> of course includes Linux.
I work for IBM, and use Symphony at work, but Symphony is based on 
OpenOffice. I have nothing against using Symphony, OpenOffice, or 
LibreOffice but my posts in HTML just end up looking terrible when I 
post them to Boston User Groups. They look OK in Symphony/OpenOffice or 
LibreOffice writer.

-- 
Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org>
Boston Linux and Unix
PGP key id:3BC1EB90
PGP Key fingerprint: 49E2 C52A FC5A A31F 8D66  C0AF 7CEA 30FC 3BC1 EB90



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