On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 11:22 PM, Marco Schuster
<marco(a)harddisk.is-a-geek.org> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 4:09 AM, Jacopo Corbetta
<jacopo.corbetta(a)gmail.com> wrote:
In our experience, the biggest obstacle is to get
the different
browsers to reliably make the same changes to HTML. The editor
interface is non-standard, and browsers sometimes disagree on encoding
rules, escaping, choice of tags, etc.
We could do the really hard way, like Google
did with Google Docs
(
http://googledocs.blogspot.com/2010/05/whats-different-about-new-google-doc…):
make *everything* via JS by capturing keystrokes and mouse movements.
This way a consistent and reproducible user experience on all
platforms can be achieved. And by doing it all in JS, the editor could
also generate a wikitext-delta right away and doesn't need to transfer
the whole page's wikitext.
Marco
Google Doc's interface acts like sh*t unless your on a super dooper
decent computer and gives negative views on the usability of a
service.
-Peachey