![]() ![]() HTML/CSS WYSIWYG editing from mathematician point of view: Yet I am an author of HTML WYSIWYG editor (it is pretty old but works up until W7). Last 10 years I am in the business of making WYSIWYG editors of various kinds. ![]() in 2016, there's no lack of coders and tooling, so if you don't want to write your own code, you may as well just spend the $10 for a shop overseas to turn your static layout into a responsive webpage overnight. I think there's some market, especially for prototyping, one-off marketing pages, and people who don't already have a preferred design workflow, but I don't think WYSIWYG will return in a large way until these editors begin doing "real" front-end lifting - i.e., "drag and drop this react/vue/whatever component within a grid, without having to know what react/vue/whatever is." the appeal of dreamweaver, frontpage, and all of those editors in the 90s was that not everyone and their mother was a coder, but everyone and their mother did want to be on the internet, and there were none of the aforementioned saas or framework solutions to rely on. one reason we don't see greater adoption is that WYSIWYG editors for the web occupy a sort of middle ground between template-based hosts like squarespace, weebly, etc, and opinionated low-barrier-to-entry frameworks like bootstrap. there's an OSS clone called grapejs, but it's still very alpha. Could any expert shed any information on why we lack a professional front-end WYSIWYG kind of editor for the web ? ![]()
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