Quick summary
Amaya is a free, open-source web browser-editor that blends browsing and in-place editing. Built to follow W3C recommendations, it provides an integrated environment for creating, modifying, and publishing web documents across platforms.
Supported technologies
- Extensive CSS 2 support for layout and styling
- Compatibility with XHTML 1.1 documents
- MathML 2.0 for mathematical markup
- Legacy HTML 4.01 handling
Publishing directly to the web
Amaya lets you save documents straight to remote servers, using URLs instead of local file names. Each uploaded page receives its own web address, which makes sharing and updating content straightforward across different sites. Keep in mind that publishing requires the appropriate server permissions and credentials.
Benefits and trade-offs
- Strengths:
- Merges browsing and editing into one interface for smoother workflows
- Standards-focused toolset, useful for precision editing of HTML, XML and CSS
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Free and cross-platform, suitable for developer environments
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Limitations:
- The feature-rich, XML-oriented design can be intimidating for newcomers
- Requires proper access rights to publish content to remote servers
Who will get the most out of it
This application is best suited to web professionals and power users who want hands-on control of markup and styling while conforming to W3C standards. Casual users or those wanting a minimal learning curve may prefer a simpler editor.
Alternative option
If you’re looking for another free editor, consider BlueGriffon — a modern web-editing alternative that many users recommend.
Technical
- Mac
- Windows
- Free