Here are Top 4 What You See Is What You Get or WYSIWYG HTML editors that allow you to create Web pages like you would a word processed document. You simply drag-and-drop the elements you would like on your page and highlight text to change its properties. WYSIWYG editors are often very easy to use, and they give you a lot of power.
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nVu - nVu is a great WYSIWYG editor. I prefer text editors to WYSIWYG editors, but if you don't, then nVu is a great choice, especially considering that it's free. I love that it has a site manager to allow you to review the sites that you're building. It's surprising that this software is free. Feature highlights: XML support, advanced CSS support, full site management, built-in validator, and international support as well as WYSIWYG and color coded XHTML editing.
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Amaya - Amaya is a bit hard to use, but it's endorsed by the W3C, so you know that pages you build in it will be standards-based. It offers features like CSS editing and will edit XML really well. Feature highlights: XML support, scripting support, advanced CSS support, built-in validator, and international support as well as WYSIWYG and color coded XHTML editing.
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Netscape Composer - Netscape Composer is a simple little Web page editor that comes included with Netscape. There isn't a lot to recommend it other than that it's free and is built-in to your Web browser. Feature highlights: WYSIWYG XHTML editing.
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ASHE - A Simple HTML Editor (ASHE) is just that, a simple HTML editor. It doesn't offer a lot of features, but if you don't need much then this works fine. Feature highlights: color coded XHTML editing.
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