- From: Christian Rębild <craebild@parknet.dk>
- Date: Wed, 30 Mar 2011 19:06:59 +0200
- To: www-amaya@w3.org
As I use Windows (XP now, older versions at earlier times) I can't say about build problems. As for your other problems, Amaya is intended as an editor, not a browser, and Amaya is intended for editing and displaying standards compliant web pages. Web pages that are not standards compliant generally do not display identically in all browsers, and cannot be expected to display as intended in all browsers. If you have come across standards compliant web pages that do not display correctly in Amaya, then that is quite another matter, and then the Amaya team will welcome information about which web pages that is, and preferably also what the problems are. Med venlig hilsen / Best regards / Mit freundlichen Grüßen Christian Rębild / Christian Raebild On 29/03/2011 13:40, llwyble@suddenlink.net wrote: > I have been using Linux since 1995 and have been using Slackware the whole > time. So I know how to work through problems on a build of a piece of > software. I gotta say this is the most mangled piece of software I have ever > seen. No matter what hoops I jumped through, no matter how much I read, no > matter what I tried it wouldn't build without erroring out. So I downloaded > the debian .deb binary and in converted it for slackware and installed it. I > pretty much discovered that it wasn't worth the download after I got it > going. Bluefish works a lot better, no it doesn't have all the bells and > whistles, but it works. Amaya doesn't even display existing web pages > properly. Gotta double click links like windows. Really disappointing after > all the grief of trying to get it built. > > > >
Received on Wednesday, 30 March 2011 17:07:34 UTC