Notepad++ ftw.
But Nvu is decent. It has a few bugs, and hasn't been updated in a few years, but it works. Someone "patched" some of the bugs and gave it a new name and called it Kompozer. Both can be obtained at http://www.nvu.com/
Notepad++ ftw.
But Nvu is decent. It has a few bugs, and hasn't been updated in a few years, but it works. Someone "patched" some of the bugs and gave it a new name and called it Kompozer. Both can be obtained at http://www.nvu.com/
Nvu was an annoying beast. Never really liked it.
Notepad++ became my weapon of choice for both web stuff as well as programming.
http://www.brendan.quinteweb.com/notepad.gif :3
Depending on how longterm your needs are, you can always download the 30day free trial of Dreamweaver. I've needed it so rarely that by the time I needed to mess with it again, I had formatted my computer for some reason, and I could redownload it. If you're doing this regularly I suppose that's not a likely option though.
HTML and CSS are both pretty easy to pick up. I still like oldschool HTML and tables though, I could never get my CSS to display consistently in all browsers. Nothing's more fun than fixing something for Firefox only to have it break in IE. Table coding may be clunky as hell, but it'll look right in just about anything. You can still do some neat things with CSS/PHP though. I think its worth knowing a little bit of everything even if you're not heavy into the actual coding of the pages... It'll give you a good idea of what's feasible/maintainable in terms of design.