Amaya v10.1 Pre is the latest version of WSWYG web editing/browser produced by W3C. It supports HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.0, XHTML Basic, XHTML 1.1, HTTP 1.1, MathML 2.0 and other formats, and supports Linux, Windows, MacOS Various operating systems including X and PowerPCl. Attachment: About Amaya Amaya is a web browser developed by members of the World Wide Web Association (W3C) and can also be used as a testing tool for W3C results. Amaya includes an HTML editor and browser, which users can download for free on W3C websites, and has corresponding versions in Linux and Windows. Amaya is distributed in the form of open source software, that is, users can modify the software source code as needed and add its functions. According to Tim Berners-Lee, the father of the Internet, the purpose of developing Amaya is because no commercial browser includes editing capabilities. The purpose of developing software is to be able to see your own code effect immediately and determine whether the browser supports it. Writing web pages from this perspective will help solve some problems. Amaya also provides a test platform to test other development achievements of W3C, such as MathML software used to write complex mathematical expressions for individual users. Berners-Lee and his men both regarded Amaya as their first choice for browsers. Some of Amaya's features are as follows: W3C has used Amaya with Jigsaw to maintain files very early. But users do not have to have Jigsaw to run Amaya. Related articles Latest articles CIO Vocabulary Stream poolOracle stream meta search NFCWi-Fi What is open source BI system WEB server cloud computing At the end of February 2008, W3C released the Amaya 10. Open source software, providing multi-platform versions. In addition to supporting HTML and CSS, the editor also supports SVG ("upgradeable vector graphics" formulated by W3C) and PDF. Unfortunately, Chinese support for Chinese is not supported at present. At that time, netizens commented: The interface is relatively simple, but the expression is very clear, and it is a standard visualization tool. If there is any improvement in Chinese support, it is definitely a good tool for web designers to replace dreamweaver.
1) It has the feature of what-you-see-is-what-you-get, and supports uploading web pages to the server.
2) Support the latest version of HTML, as well as XHTML.
3) It works in HTML code or WYSIWYG view mode.
4) The use habits of people with disabilities are considered.
5) Ensure that the web page created by the user is correctly constructed, so that when using this page with other tools, you can understand the running results.
6) Assist in creating hyperlinks.
7) Support PNG format pictures.
8) Support printing form content or form links in documents.
9) Provides API functions written in C language, which can easily add new functions or modify existing functions. Inside W3C, Amaya is also used to test Java API functions in the DOM.