Source A standard compliant web browser and editor: Amaya
Some web browsers don't fully respect web standards and many WYSIWYG HTML editors produce absolutely revolting code. W3C set out standards as to how HTML (and XHTML etc) should appear and whilst some choose to ignore these, some are devoted to the following of these standards.
Sticking to standards can therefore lead to issues with certain web browsers, which lack support for the latest tags or render pages wrong.
The W3C therefore has its own web browser and editor which adheres to standards more than many browsers and supports certain new technologies others don't, such as RDF annotation. This browser is Amaya, an open-source and cross-platform browser.
Some web browsers don't fully respect web standards and many WYSIWYG HTML editors produce absolutely revolting code. W3C set out standards as to how HTML (and XHTML etc) should appear and whilst some choose to ignore these, some are devoted to the following of these standards.
Sticking to standards can therefore lead to issues with certain web browsers, which lack support for the latest tags or render pages wrong.
The W3C therefore has its own web browser and editor which adheres to standards more than many browsers and supports certain new technologies others don't, such as RDF annotation. This browser is Amaya, an open-source and cross-platform browser.