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October 1st, 2010 at 6:28 am
Blogspot.com
October 1st, 2010 at 8:06 pm
website builder does she know coding if not she will have to learn or have her find someone who knows what they are doing hell she can even email me i will write the code for a price
October 3rd, 2010 at 9:52 pm
I use notepad++ as it doesn’t leave any garbage data as you do all the scripting yourself. It has automatic syntax highlighting and all that jazz. It is easy because transitioning does not require learning a whole lot of commands like in WYSIWYG editors. The GUI is pretty intuitive, too.
If your mother isn’t into getting down into the code and scripting herself or doesn’t want to learn HTML, PHP, CSS, Javascript, etc., then there are many other solutions. I’ve worked with Dreamweaver many times in the past. The learning curve is steep, and it is a little on the expensive side ($400), but once you get used to it gets easier. You still might need to do some coding once in a while, though.
If she isn’t good with computers or hasn’t been in the business and doesn’t want weeks of training, there are many developers who you can hire, but I will warn you, prices and quality vary. I recommend asking people what their experiences have been like with individual developers and which one they like best. I can’t give you a recommendation as I haven’t hired any third-party developers.
I hope that helped.
October 5th, 2010 at 5:31 am
You don’t have to know html coding at all to make a website these days. Services such as Homestead make it really easy – all you do is drag and drop. The point of a website builder is that they do the coding – you just edit content and design. There’s a great site that reviews website builders .
October 7th, 2010 at 5:51 pm
this is the easiest and absolutely the best on the web >>>
read all the pages carefully..
Hope this helps.