In fact there needs to be three link indicators: How about you at least indicate that your link is going to open a new window? I know, lots of sites do it, and I dont like them any better. We've just gotten browsers with tab support, dont you love how there arent a zillion windows floating around? I have to close the damn window you just opened, and then command click to put it in a tab, and then close your tab. I know YOU think YOUR site is important, but if _I_ want to come back to it _I_ will.Īll you do is disrupt my browsing experience.
The last thing I want to open a new window. What can I say, can web site designers please STOP OPENING LINKS IN NEW F**KING WINDOWS. Thanks for the compliment on my site - always welcome I'm currently designing a new site focused 100% on the strength of the Mac platform. If you need to know more, just let me know!
#Freeway pro web trial#
A Freeway 30-day trial ia available should you be interested in trying it out. What works for me, might not work for you.
#Freeway pro web code#
With some post-processing to change tags to and a few other tweaks (which can be done automatically using BBEdit and a well-written search-and-replace expression), you can create code that will pass the validator test as well.Īt the end of the day though, it's just a tool. This is how browsers have always worked.įreeway creates code that will pass the user test, out of the box, without any additional effort on your part. Those browsers ignore deprecated tags by policy, because they don't need them. The W3C checker flags these deprecated tags as errors, when in fact they are never going to be used by the newer standards-based browsers. to make the rendered page match your design). It includes "deprecated" HTML tags that are designed to force older browsers to produce reliable output (i.e. The code generated by Freeway is very good - I have yet to experience the problem where things I made work in one browser, but not in another.įreeway produces HTML that works well in almost all browsers. It allows you to truly focus on designing with out worrying code at all. I think Freeway is for those who (initially) don't care about the code.