On 7/3/06, dondi_2006 dondi_2006@libero.it wrote:
The rich client side XUL administrator summer of code project (I believe) gets closer to what you are looking to find.
That looks like the performancing firefox plugin. Something great when you have to post short stuff, once in a while, certainly not for "volume" production. As such, I'll surely use it when ready. Thanks for signalling it.
Well, you were bemoaning the lack of a "real, full, screen word processors and HTML editors, with spell checking, macros and lots of other goodies." That client (and performancing and...) gives most of what you were complaining about.
It would be handy to know more details about your situation: How often you want to post new content? How often you need to edit old content? How long the posts are and how much markup you are including?
Drupal sites are generally used for community content where it is created by many people. In that case, it makes more sense to use an in-browser WYSIWYG editor.
I disagree here. I don't think the intended *number* of authors matters at all. What I see is that Drupal, Wordpress, and basically every blog/cms I know of is implicitly designed for author(s) who publish (very) short texts, only once in a while.
Ok, I'll re-assert my point. Imagine your requirements in a multi publisher environment. Multiple people editing multiple text files on their client side and running scripts that directly import them into the system. That's what you want, right? Well, how do you control versioning? How do you control the individual preferences of each user to write their text files one way or another using one editor or another? How do you sync a local copy back with the server copy (since there are multiple editors...)? I'm not sure I've ever heard/seen anyone do what you're talking about.
You don't have to spend much time looking around before you see that people use all kinds of CMS for a wide variety of tasks including very long and highly formatted documents that get revised on a regular basis (have you seen the drupal handbooks, for instance?). And they do all that right within the browser.
Regards, Greg