None taken, always looking for a better editor solution.
Ibrowser took about 1 min to load (IE 7, FF2..14) folder with 40 or so images (800KB) and upon closing of the window it would reload into the same process for next insert. Quite annoying.
Text loading…with the link and technique above it uses image list loaded into forms drop-down and requests are made 1 image per selection (see img.). This, for some reason, works in a matter of a seconds. It could be my settings of Ibrowser plugin but it never really got faster…could be just me .
Thanks!
That jQuery markitup is nice, but it’s not a WYSIWYG by any means.
One of its most compelling features, in my book.
errr, this is a thread requesting a WYSIWYG editor.
lebisol - 22 May 2008 12:06 AM
None taken, always looking for a better editor solution.
Ibrowser took about 1 min to load (IE 7, FF2..14) folder with 40 or so images (800KB) and upon closing of the window it would reload into the same process for next insert. Quite annoying.
Text loading…with the link and technique above it uses image list loaded into forms drop-down and requests are made 1 image per selection (see img.). This, for some reason, works in a matter of a seconds. It could be my settings of Ibrowser plugin but it never really got faster…could be just me .
Thanks!
That’s interesting. I’d like to know if my users are seeing those load times.
I just checked, the images directory I’m using has 180 images in it and it took about 15 seconds to load them all. Personally I don’t use the browse feature much, I use it to upload. But you raise some good points.
That jQuery markitup is nice, but it’s not a WYSIWYG by any means.
One of its most compelling features, in my book.
errr, this is a thread requesting a WYSIWYG editor.
Well, I mean it’s close enough for my users, really. You don’t have to remember the codes to use, because the editor inserts them for you, but the resulting code remains clean and usable. I for one like it.
I disagree with classifying markitup as a wysiwyg editor. In fact, it is nothing of the sort. It just provides a more intuitive means for styling text content and perhaps easier image manipulation. That being said… this is a far cry from a Front Page or a Dreamweaver design view.
I disagree with classifying markitup as a wysiwyg editor.
Well, YEAH. Read the front page of markitup’s site:
markItUp! is not meant to be a “Full-Features-Out-of-the-Box”-editor. Instead it is a very lightweight, customizable and flexible engine made to meet the developer’s needs in their CMSes, blogs, forums or websites. markItUp! is not a WYSIWYG editor, and it never will be.
I was just pointing out that it at least has a preview. I’ll exit this thread now - good luck with your WYSIWYG’s, folks.
Sorry if I ruffled any feathers. That was not my intention. I, too, do not want to see any bloated wysiwyg editor included standard with EE. Maybe a very light one as a plugin.
@JT Thompson
Yeah mee too, I am quite impressed with Ibrowser look & feel but performance was discouraging and if anyone else wants to share please post.
@mdesign
Keep up the work, it looks like a nice aid and why not offer an alternative tool.
You may need to contact an expert local web developer to review this script and to optimize it for you. Once the script is patched according the above limit the issue should be resolved. Note that we have set the above limit in order to provide equal resources for each account on the server….
<insert their push for dedicated server here>
I suppose the “optimizing” part is subjective but there is something that plugin making it crawl & hog…for what is worth…
All the best!
But it cost 120$ per site. If I will do site with WYSIWYG, I might choose Kae’s File Manager with “LG TinyMCE Plus KFM” extension - I tested it today and its looks powerful and its simplicity in implementation.
But it cost 120$ per site. If I will do site with WYSIWYG, I might choose Kae’s File Manager with “LG TinyMCE Plus KFM” extension - I tested it today and its looks powerful and its simplicity in implementation.
Sure it does, but what is 120$ compared to a powerful marketing instrument such as a website is nowadays and mostly compared to the total costs / ROI, those 120$ / per site are well spent - at least it seems to be the most practical solution, not only for the customers.
You might also buy an unlimited license if you’re doing a lot of pages, which of course lowers the price with each website you make. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not affiliated with Moxiecode in any way. We’ve tested a lot of WYSIWYG editors during last couple of years (in quite a few Drupal installations too) and somehow we always ended up with TinyMCE and those two plugins.