Quanta Gold Reviewed 12
An anonymous reader writes "Ever wondered how commercial Linux Web development environments stack up against
those for other OS's? There's a reivew at Digital-Web
of Quanta Gold, the commercial HTML editor from theKompany.com. I've always been a fan of Quanta Plus, but it's
interesting to see what the commercial application has (and doesn't have). The
full review
of Quanta Gold can be found here."
No Documentation? (Score:4, Insightful)
The reviewer doesn't know about kio_fish (Score:2, Interesting)
The reviewer doesn't know about kio_fish [hoschi.de]. (He might also be using an older version of KDE. Although it can be used with older versions if you in
Re:The reviewer doesn't know about kio_fish (Score:5, Interesting)
kio_fish is a very handy and nice feature for all KDE apps, I totally agree.
What I was saying in the article though is that there is no built in interface (that I'm aware of) which allows you to browse remote servers from *within* the HTML app itself. Quanta Gold provides that functionality, albeit only through FTP, by including an 'FTP' pane within the application. (This image [digital-web.com] and this pic (195Kb) [five2one.org] for examples of what I mean.
I also realize that one could set up NFS or Samba mounts on the local FS, to achieve remote connections through the application, but that's not something the Application provides *itself*. So while kio_fish is something I really like and use quite often, it would slow development down a lot to have to open up each file individually via File -> Open -> Location -> fish://...
It's a lot faster to be able to view the remote directories in realtime and being able to select which files you wish to open with something as simple as a double-click.
Appreciate the feedback,
Dan
Re:The reviewer doesn't know about kio_fish (Score:1, Troll)
Ah, I get what you mean. I've long since turned off the pane on the side. I don't really need to see the file system I suppose. And it takes up a lot of room.
You're exactly right, though: it would be very nice if you could see the remote filesystem through the tabbed window. I'd almost certainly use it again if I could do that. I
Re:Bleeding for WinSCP (Score:2, Insightful)
Simple drag and drop, mouse selected, secure transfers. Is this too much to ask?
Not at all, it's a reality with KDE 3.1. I use it almost every day. Why are you using a pre-3.1 KDE anyway?