My first experience with <oXygen/>
Posted: Sat Jul 19, 2008 10:30 pm
I'm a professional writer just now authoring new academic material for my master of arts, so I bought <oXygen/> after trying it for few days. As much as I had used other XML-oriented products before (Framemaker+XML, XML Spy, Stylus Studio, Jedit with XML plug-ins) it's hard to believe that you're selling this product, even at the professional version cost, so cheaply. Framemaker is $1200 and offers no advantages over oXygen that I can see.
Anyway, I've got a couple of suggestions (which I always have for new products) that you might be interested in.
The IDE of UEStudio by IDM Computer Solutions exhibits functionality that you might consider. One trick, in particular, is the ability to add items to the help menu - links to PDFs and CHMs, external web sites, etc. Considering the immense complexity of the XML world, there's a real need for users to have a lot of documentation at hand. Another crafty feature of theirs is saved IDE configurations - really handy when you're bopping around between projects of different kinds and you'd like to re-arrange the workspace for each project.
I hate the way help info always stays on top and has no minimize button. It's impossible to follow a procedure without about 3 acres of screen space at hand.
I'm working in Docbook 4.4, and I'd like to stop seeing those element descriptions popping up all over the place in Author mode when the mouse point is left sitting over content. Maybe there's an option to control this, but I can't find it.
More later. Thanks for reading this far.
Anyway, I've got a couple of suggestions (which I always have for new products) that you might be interested in.
The IDE of UEStudio by IDM Computer Solutions exhibits functionality that you might consider. One trick, in particular, is the ability to add items to the help menu - links to PDFs and CHMs, external web sites, etc. Considering the immense complexity of the XML world, there's a real need for users to have a lot of documentation at hand. Another crafty feature of theirs is saved IDE configurations - really handy when you're bopping around between projects of different kinds and you'd like to re-arrange the workspace for each project.
I hate the way help info always stays on top and has no minimize button. It's impossible to follow a procedure without about 3 acres of screen space at hand.
I'm working in Docbook 4.4, and I'd like to stop seeing those element descriptions popping up all over the place in Author mode when the mouse point is left sitting over content. Maybe there's an option to control this, but I can't find it.
More later. Thanks for reading this far.