You can use Amaya to open and browse local and remote Web documents. You can also use it to create and modify Web pages.
Browsing with Amaya is similar to browsing with other Web browsers. For example, the Amaya button bar includes stop, back, next, refresh, home, save, and print buttons. There is one important difference: you double-click a link to activate it. See Activating a Link for more information.
Note:
This behavior can be changed through the Browsing
Preferences dialog under the Special>Preferences
menu. By changing the Double click activates link option,
you can browse documents with a single click as you would in a traditional
Web browser. However, you will not be able to edit a link by clicking within
it.
Other browsing preferences like the loading of images and the application of
CSS can be controled in the Browsing Preferences menu.
Unlike other browsers, Amaya also provides tools for editing web pages. See these topics for more information on editing:
By default, Amaya begins in editor mode. In this mode, you can edit the current document as well as browse in the window.
The button bar displays the button when the window is in editor mode, and the button when the window is in browser mode. In browse mode, you can only browse and fill in forms.
To toggle the window from editor mode to browser mode, click the button. Click the button to return to editor mode. You can also select this mode by choosing Editor Mode from the Edit menu, or by using a keyboard shortcut (the default is Shift-Control-*).
Note:
You can set the mode independently for each document window.
Amaya reads HTML and XHTML documents differently:
Because the default charset is different for HTML and XHTML documents, authors often create documents using the incorrect charset. For example, consider an XHTML document that uses ISO-Latin-1 but does not provide information about the charset. When the XML parser analyzing the document encounters a character that does not match a valid UTF-8 character, the document is considered to be not well formed. Parsing stops and Amaya displays an error message that proposes either to reload the document as an HTML document or to show parsing errors. If show parsing errors is selected, Amaya activates the Reparse in HTML option on the File menu. Choose this option to set the document's charset to ISO-Latin-1 and re-open the document so it can be properly parsed. Amaya considers the reopened document to be modified (because a charset was added), and you can save it.