Information Madness

Tuesday, Mar 16th

Last update:05:08:24 PM GMT

Headlines:
You are here: Blog Blog Don't create a website, Draw your new website
 

Don't create a website, Draw your new website

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Bookmark and Share

ImageI have been into IT for quite sometime now. I know the coding, development and backend part of the websites but I am not good in actually creating a website. When I said creating, I meant from the look and feel the site. I am not a good site designer and I think you can see that from my current website layout (I know it looks crap, I am working on redesigning it). The problem with creating websites now a days is the CSS stylesheets and how you place those <div> tags and all that. It would be nice if we can just visually draw the elements and it generate our website code. Wouldn't it?

 

Here is a website for people like us. Don't create your website, draw your website. The site is called Drawter.com. It gives you nice interface where you can just point your mouse on the scaled window with point, drag and click. Now you can just draw any HTML element. Once you are done drawing your website, you can generate the code.  

 

{moslate}{mostyroo}{/mostyroo}{/moslate} 

 

Drawter Beta 1 is a tool written in JavaScript and based on jQuery library. It provides you the possibility to literally draw your website's code. It runs on every single web-browser which makes it really useful and helpful. Each tag is presented as a layer you have drawn.

 

Currently Drawter is not a tool for people who doesn't know HTML or CSS but the Drawter team is working on a new version called "Amateur" which will be useful for people who don't need to have HTML or CSS knowledge.

 

Its cool, Isn't it?

 

Tags: {moslate}{technotags keywords="Drawter|Website Design"}{/technotags}{/moslate}

 

 

 

Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

!joomlacomment 4.0 Copyright (C) 2009 Compojoom.com . All rights reserved."