Amaya (web editor)
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Amaya 11.3 under Windows 7
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Developer(s) | W3C, INRIA |
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Initial release | July 1996[1] |
Stable release | 11.4.4 (January 18, 2012[±] | )
Preview release | 11.4.7 (July 23, 2013[±] | )
Written in | C |
Operating system | Windows, OS X, Linux |
Platform | IA-32, x64 |
Available in | English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Hungarian, Georgian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese, Chinese, Finnish, Dutch, Slovak, Ukrainian[2][3] |
Type | HTML editor, web browser |
License | W3C |
Website | www |
Amaya (formerly Amaya World)[4] is a free and open source WYSIWYG web authoring tool[5] with browsing abilities.
It was created by a structured editor project at the INRIA, a French national research institution, and later adopted by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) as their testbed for web standards;[6] a role it took over from the Arena web browser.[7][8][9] Since the last release in January 2012, INRIA and the W3C have stopped supporting the project and active development has ceased.[10][11]
Amaya has relatively low system requirements, even in comparison with other web browsers from the era of its active development period, so it has been considered a "lightweight" browser.[12]
Contents
History
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.Ramzi Guetari joined the team in October 1996.[13] Daniel Veillard was responsible for the integration of CSS in Amaya and maintained the Linux version.[13]
Features
- Access keys
- Caret navigation
- Page zooming
- Password management
- Spell checking
- Transport protocols
- Support for CSS, MathML, SVG, RDF and Xpointer
- Displays free and open image formats such as PNG and SVG, as well as a subset of SVG animation.
Codebase timeline
Amaya originated as a direct descendant of the Grif WYSIWYG[14] SGML editor created by Vincent Quint and Irène Vatton at INRIA in the early 1980s,[13] and of the HTML editor Symposia, itself based on Grif, both developed and sold by French software company Grif SA.
Originally designed as a structured text editor (predating SGML) and later as an HTML and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) editor, it was then expanded to include XML-based capabilities such as XHTML,[14] MathML[14] and Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG).[14]
A test bed application
It was used as a test-bed for new web technologies that were not supported in major browsers.[12][15]
Amaya was the first client that supported the RDF annotation schema using XPointer.[16][17][18][19] The browser was available for Linux,[20] Windows (NT and 95),[20] Mac OS X, AmigaOS, SPARC / Solaris,[20] AIX,[20] OSF/1.[20]
Naming and logo
Amaya was formerly called Tamaya.[21] Tamaya is the name of the type of tree represented in the logo, but it was later discovered that Tamaya is also a trademark used by a French company, so the developers chose to drop the first letter to make it "Amaya".[22]
See also
References
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External links
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles using small message boxes
- Use dmy dates from March 2012
- Free HTML editors
- Free software programmed in C
- Free web browsers
- Discontinued web browsers
- Web browsers for AmigaOS
- OS X web browsers
- POSIX web browsers
- Windows web browsers
- 1996 software
- World Wide Web Consortium
- Gopher clients
- Software that uses wxWidgets
- Software using the W3C license