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Jenn Forager

5 Web Design and Development Tools I Simply Can't Live Without (and Why) - ProfHacker -... - 0 views

shared by Jenn Forager on 09 Apr 11 - No Cached
  • Alternatives: Even though, Coda is my go-to tool, I’ve used MacroMate’s TextMate in the past, and like it quite a bit. It’s a really powerful code editor with all sorts of helpful great features. TextMate comes in pretty cheap at $50/license. If you are looking for something free, I would suggest giving TextWrangler from Bare Bones Software a try. As text/code editor it gets the job done admirably. And best of all, its free. On the Windows side of things, I would suggest Notepad ++.
  • An FTP client is vital for any web design and development. For me, that client is Transmit.
  • Color is the unsung hero of web design. Seriously, a good color palette can draw your audience into your site and give them a powerful feeling of immersion, and (best of all) keep them coming back to your site (which is one of the points of good design, isn’t it?). When it comes to tools to help you not only build color palettes based on color schemes, but also translate colors into usable hexadecimal codes, there is nothing better than Kuler.
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  • Why waste money on commercial software that will soon become obsolete when there are some excellent open source tools? I recommend Kompozer (a nice HTML editor), and WinSCP (an FTP client)
  • I build sites on the side, and there’s definatly a few that I couldn’t work without:MAMPTextMateFirefox + Firebug (most important for web dev ever!)BrowsershotsPhotoshopCyberduck (Transmit is awesome, but not freeware, and the extra features just aren’t that cool)I really recommend everyone get Firebug!
  • Not being the WYSIWYG sort, I currently do most of my work in jEdit, which is also what I use in the classroom for all programming instruction. It is open source, has a huge plugin library for pretty much every programming language ever thought of (even oddball things like Linden Scripting Language for Second Life), and, as a Java app, is entire cross platform. A regExp aware search/replace tool that can search both buffers and full directory trees is indispensible for those big projects.
  • I am glad someone put PhotoShop in there. I do a lot of design for print (fliers and other stuff that I print at home but that looks great). Photoshop plus InDesign are key tools for this. I also use InDeisgn to make beautiful lecture slides (circumventing PowerPoint).
  • @christian_d – notepad++ is definitely a good option. When I still used Windows, I regularly used it. Fast, full featured, open source, and free. All good in my book.
  • @mhick255 – Espresso is a good app. I’ve recommended it to many. If I wasn’t using Coda, I’d probably be using it.
  • A few years ago I picked up a copy of Zend Studio (ZDE 5.2) at an academic price of $99. Not sure if they still offer that sort of deal, but its been a great tool. Especially when it comes to automagically finishing tags/quotes, highlighting syntax errors before hand, etc. Its great for PHP (of course!) but also HTML editing and so forth. I like BBEdit for HTML-ing as well. I see lots of kudos for Coda so I’ll give that a look-see sometime.
  • @proftucker – BBEdit is a great code editor, and well worth people’s time to check out if they are looking for something a little more streamlined than something like Coda
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    Coda's editor is elegant and quite powerful (and allows real time collaborating using the Subetha Engine). In addition, it has a light version of Transmit (Panic's awesome FTP client, which I'll actually talk about next) built right in. You'll also find an SVN client and a terminal under the hood. Coda's price is also pretty decent. A license will only set you back $99. The bottom line is that I would be completely lost without Coda.
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