3/2/2024 0 Comments Redactor wysiwygBoth technologies allow Web developers to make parts of a page editable - in slightly different ways, of course. IE 5.5 had the MSHTML Editing Platform (), and Mozilla has its Rich Text Editing API. Both Mozilla and Internet Explorer have included ways to make sections of a page editable.They are going to be happier editing in Creole -Kevin Holzer (see for contact) 12:38, g29 December 2010 (PST) Shtriter 07:20, 26 July 2006 (UTC) Reply Users using text based browsers don't matter for WYSIWIG. But not all users have Java on their machines and JavaScript is supported by all popular browsers (well, maybe except text-based, but I think that Java wouldn't work there too). Only Java applet is (possibly) cross-browser compatible. Requiring users to install any sort of plugin is very undesirable. This would probably be workable, but would take quite a bit of hackery, and may or may not work. Create a custom browser plug-in, Java applet, ActiveX control.Capture mouse input, buttons, keystrokes, etc., and actually edit the HTML of the current document. There are a few options for making a WYSIWYG editor that works in the browser. The WYSIWYG editor could also be limited to reflect only existing wiki markup, with its democratically decided simplicities and compromises for complexities - adding nothing to the wiki markup, only providing a more visually straightforward means of changing the markup. As noted hereinbefore, HTML TEXTAREAS could be a fallback for older browsers or those that prefer this for fine control.
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