- From: Irene Vatton <Irene.Vatton@inria.fr>
- Date: Wed, 03 Jun 2009 09:14:45 +0200
- To: Mark Leisher <mleisher@math.nmsu.edu>
- Cc: www-amaya@w3.org
Le jeudi 28 mai 2009 à 13:21 -0600, Mark Leisher a écrit : > Peter Kerr wrote: > > On 29/05/2009, at 2:08 AM, Mark Leisher wrote: > > > >> I meant copying a PDF or Word file from their desktop to the computer > >> that hosts their web pages. They can do this now with a SSH/SFTP > >> client, but they want to do everything with Amaya. > > > > It's called WEBDAV when you do it with a browser, but > > > > Is your server set up to do this? > > > > WebDAV is working fine. There just doesn't seem to be any way to have > Amaya transfer PDF or Word files when they save changes to or create a > web page. I am just trying to verify that the first scenario below is > the current reality with Amaya. > > The way it works now: > > I have a PDF file on my desktop that I want to make available to > students. > > 1) Use an SFTP client (i.e. firezilla, winscp) to copy the PDF file > from my desktop to my web folder. > 2) Use Amaya to add a link in index.html to the PDF file. > > The way they *want* it to work: > > I have a PDF file on my desktop that I want to make available to > students. > > 1) I add a link in index.html to a PDF file using Amaya, and when I > save it, the PDF file on my desktop gets copied to my web folder. It could work that way if Amaya considers that PDF file as a resource, like images, CSS and script files. I'll add the management of these new file types. > > We are moving away from commercial packages like Dreamweaver because of > a dwindling budget and are experimenting with Amaya. -- Irene Vatton <Irene.Vatton@inria.fr> INRIA
Received on Wednesday, 3 June 2009 07:15:21 UTC