Adobe is changing the world through digital experiences. We help our customers create, deliver and optimize content and applications. Dream bigger. Creative Cloud. The next generation of Creative Cloud is here. New features. New ways to create. It's everything you need to. HomeSite provides a lean, code-only editor for Web development. Advanced coding features enable you to instantly create and modify HTML, CFML, JSP, and XHTML tags, while enhanced productivity.
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(Redirected from Adobe HomeSite)
HomeSite was an HTML editor originally developed by Nick Bradbury. Unlike WYSIWYG HTML editors such as FrontPage and Dreamweaver, HomeSite was designed for direct editing, or 'hand coding,' of HTML and other website languages.
I need a Homesite download. Where can I get it. I have it on my old pc, working fine, but I want it on my new computer. I have been using Homesite since 1999. My latest version is/was 5.5. The last location for download was my macromedia login. But it is out of order. I cannot login in my account.
After a successful partnership with the company to distribute it alongside its own competing Dreamweaver software, HomeSite was acquired by Macromedia in 2001, after which elements of the software were integrated into Dreamweaver. Following the acquisition of Macromedia by Adobe Systems, the company announced on May 26, 2009 that HomeSite would be discontinued.[2][3]
History[edit]
It was originally developed in Borland Delphi in 1995 by Nick Bradbury. Bradbury wrote HomeSite after using HotDog and being frustrated with it. In March 1997 Allaire Corporation from Cambridge, Massachusetts (founded by brothers Jeremy and J.J. Allaire) acquired HomeSite and Nick Bradbury joined Allaire. After leaving Allaire in 1998, Bradbury went on to work on the CSS/xHTML editor TopStyle and the RSS reader FeedDemon. Macromedia acquired Allaire in 2001 and was in turn acquired by Adobe in 2005.
At Allaire, a version of HomeSite was created as an IDE for ColdFusion, selling as ColdFusion Studio. This version was later merged into Coldfusion MX under Macromedia, and was then called HomeSite+. Development of HomeSite continued in parallel, though the standalone HomeSite was still sold separately.
In the days that HomeSite was under Nick Bradbury, and then part of Allaire, it had an enthusiastic following from its user community. While many software companies at the time had WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) website creation tools where the user never saw the code, Nick Bradbury created a product that was code centric and popular with those that preferred to work directly in the code, a concept that was dubbed 'What You See Is What You Need.' Further he built in a variety of ways that users could customize the user interface and extend the functionality. Allaire kept this concept going as its target market of ColdFusion users were code-centric as well. Allaire developers expanded upon Nick's original HomeSite capabilities by adding features like built-in scripting, improved syntax coloring, and VTML for tag insight and tag editors. Nigeria labour act pdf.
Macromedia licensed a copy of HomeSite to include in Windows versions of Dreamweaver 1.0 (Mac versions bundled BBEdit). This OEM deal started the relationship between the companies and eventually led to the acquisition of Allaire by Macromedia in 2001. Although Macromedia improved the hand coding features in Dreamweaver 6.0 (MX) to be more on par with HomeSite, the company continued to produce both products separately, stating that 'both products are excellent for their specific purposes.'[4] Macromedia was then acquired by Adobe in 2005. In May 2009, Adobe elected to cease development of HomeSite, and no longer supports the product, though they still maintain a forum for active users . Instead, existing HomeSite users are asked to consider switching to the newest version of Dreamweaver.[2]
Versions[edit]
There was also another version called HomeSite+ which was included in Dreamweaver MX 2004 and greater. HomeSite+ had additional functionality for ColdFusion application development, and was generally comparable to the version of HomeSite formerly called ColdFusion Studio. HomeSite+/CF Studio versions parallel standalone HomeSite versions.
Features[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Macromedia_HomeSite&oldid=882661650'
discussion begins.
features - advert flagging, rewrite discussion[edit]
The features section was flagged advert, so needs some rewriting. IMO these are the lines that would need the most work, or that seem to be more marketing-flavored. Suggestions for rewording welcomed. --jwilkinson 23:38, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
(True, but needs some kind of rewrite. suggestions? )
(rephrase without the 'save time' ?)
(Suggest a rewrite with some detail of the search and replace and/or extended search and replace functionality instead of saying 'Very powerful')
Are there any others that seem to be adverts? IMO the rest are pretty factual and accurate. --jwilkinson 23:38, 17 September 2007 (UTC) history - syntax highlighting[edit]
On 13:25, 10 September 2007, someone (user was an IP) removed the phrase 'powerful syntax coloring' from the history of what Allaire added, explaining 'Bradbury's original Homesite already had extensive syntax coloring before Allaire acquired the software. Allaire may have expanded it, but they did not add it.'
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While I recall that the pre-Allaire HomeSite had syntax highlighting, I believe it wasn't very powerful or customizable by the user, at least compared to what was added. It just had an options dialog of some areas that you could assign different colors. (different types of tags, text, script, etc?)
Allaire added the TSyntaxMemo scriptable syntax coloring, which is not only more powerful, but far more customizable. Users have written additional syntax highlighting add-ons for new languages in HomeSite. I think the TSyntaxMemo Parser was added around version 4.0. Does anyone recall?
I'd suggest we put back the text, perhaps modified to make it clear that Allaire improved the syntax highlighting and made it more customizable & extensible. Any thoughts or opinions on this suggested change? --jwilkinson 23:26, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
citation needed discussion[edit]
Currently this text has some citation needed flags:
While many software companies at the time had WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) website creation tools where the user never saw the code, Nick Bradbury created a product that was code centric and loved by those that preferred to work directly in the code,[citation needed] a concept that was dubbed 'What You See Is What You Need.'[citation needed]
Would it be more NPOV and considered more verified-verifiable to change 'loved' to 'popular'? Having been a user at the time, I can confirm that the statement is true with many I corresponded with in the forums, though those old forums are gone now, so I'm not sure what would count as an acceptable citation. Would a link to a product review that mentions its popularity with users suffice?
Secondly, on the 'What You See Is What You Need.' phrase, that was a marketing phrase used by Allaire to describe the interface, and to contrast it with WYSIWYG. What type of citation would be sufficient to validate that? (We'd only have to validate that HS was dubbed that, not that the WYSIWYN is true) A simple google on WYSIWYN and HomeSite finds a number of reviews and copies of Allaire's marketing blurb mentioning this. Some listed below. --jwilkinson 23:26, 17 September 2007 (UTC)
I noticed that the following sentences have citation requests listed: 'Some dedicated HomeSite users have criticized Macromedia for neglecting the tool in favor of the more expensive Dreamweaver editor. Now that Adobe has bought Macromedia (2006), its future has been questioned even more.'
I didn't write those sentences, and I can agree on the need to add citations or remove them. That may be difficult unless someone can find published articles discussing the issue. Much of the criticism and discussion along those lines (that I saw) occurred in the HomeSite support forums, and may not even be visible in the forum archives.
And, while the sentences are true and accurate, it may be counter-productive to include them. So, should they be removed?--jwilkinson 22:05, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
Add an Infobox?[edit]
Should the HomeSite page have a software Infobox? (presumably using Template:Infobox_Software)What determines what software uses an Infobox?
Here's a start, we can copy it to the main page if/when ready. Feel free to add logo and screenshot images if desired. --jwilkinson 01:10, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
A few changes:
Adobe Homesite 5.5 Software
I'll see about getting a logo and caption later. Koweja 20:57, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
Logo and screen shots are added. I'm going to move it to the main page. If there is anything to debate it can be pulled temporarily. Koweja 23:06, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
Adobe Homesite 5.5 Download
link addition question - asp4hs[edit]
I made some updates to this Macromedia HomeSite page, as one of the volunteers who help support HomeSite users. Hopefully my edits maintain the style and objectivity of the content.
I had added a link to part of my own site, but now I'm not sure if that's ok.I'm a wikipedia newbie, and just came across the policies on external links which say not to add links to a site you own, but to suggest it in the talk.
I had added the following to External Links.
ASP4HS, ASP, PHP, .Net, XML, XSL, SQL development extensions for HomeSite, user community add-on repository
I also added a specific link within the feature text, mentioning that 'Syntax-coloring parser syntax and examples are available to help users to extend or write their own.' and linking to my own site's page where that information is posted. Since Macromedia doesn't offer one place with all this information I'd suggest this is a useful link.
I'll leave it up to you all whether to leave these in or remove it.
I would say that my site is free and non-commercial and this portion is all about HomeSite. I run it as a non-Macromedia volunteer, and that I offer a lot of information on using HomeSite, as well as a repository place for a great many user-created extensions to HomeSite. My site is one of the only current *active* HomeSite user sites. If that's not worth linking to, I'm not sure what is.
Thanks for considering and for guiding me in wikipedia ettiquette.jeff wilkinson, jwilkinson 20:21, 14 April 2006 (UTC) Free dvd decoder.
HomeSite+ and ColdFusion Studio[edit]
It's nice to know that there are others out there who also have a place in their hearts for HomeSite. In so many ways, it seems to me to be the quintessential web development tool. Consider how many years have gone by since there's been active development on HomeSite, yet its features are current-- XHTML support, CSS support, Validation, etc.-- all of these features were available in an editor which was given to us before it's time. One might wonder how HomeSite might have continued to help pave the way for the Web Standards that we follow today, and how it would likely lead us into tomorrow-- how an enhanced development tool might develop with the Hand Coder in mind, not a WYSIWYG software user. At least we have each other's support, and the custom add-on's made by the HomeSite community to keep us smiling for many years to come.
In the Versions section of the article, it is mentioned that HomeSite+ is generally comparable to a 'version of HomeSite called ColdFusion Studio'. So, ColdFusion Studio is in fact a HomeSite version? I'd like to see that part be made more clear.
I was going to make a comment about the ColdFusion affinity which HomeSite seems to bear, yet it is not emphasized in the Article. While I appreciate the purist viewpoint on the matter, I was not introduced to HomeSite until it was an MM product, yet i don't recall it being referenced in my first studies of ColdFusion (but perhaps it was overlooked for my, then naive, sensitivity to text on DreamWeaver), however after i started reading some of the more advanced ColdFusion articles, there is a lot of talk about HomeSite as being the preferred editor for use with cfml. As a HomeSite+ user, I must remark that all signs seem to point toward ColdFusion (especially HomeSite+ which instead of simply asking for servermappings, it asks for the location of the ColdFusion server!)-- as if perhaps it was to be a hand-in-hand marketing campaign until DW integrated the ColdFusion functionality, and with the advent of cmfx, seemed to take over.
In my opinion, although other software developers have tried, there is no better match to ColdFusion development than HomeSite+.
Unicode support[edit]
Is there any possibility for the proper Unicode(UTF-8) support by HS 5.5/+ ?
External links modified[edit]
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