html-helper-mode

html-helper-mode is an emacs mode to make editing HTML files easier, inspired by Marc Andreessen's html-mode. html-helper-mode does most of the things that html-mode does, but with a slightly different interface and lots of new features.

To use this mode, you need two lisp files:

You might also like to try this user-contributed code by Ulrik Dickow for font-lock support.

Put these files in your load-path and byte compile them (if you want). Then arrange for html-helper-mode to be loaded: the easiest way is to put this in your .emacs:

  (autoload 'html-helper-mode "html-helper-mode" "Yay HTML" t)
  (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("¥¥.html$" . html-helper-mode) auto-mode-alist))
Alternately, you can get an entire distribution of html-helper-mode, including these HTML documents, as html-helper-mode.tar.gz.


NEW: the version of tempo.el I am now distributing is version 1.2. There are lots of new things in this version: the relevant change here is the completion code has been updated to be consistent with post emacs-19.26 definitions of the ¥= regexp token. If completion wasn't working before, try this version. I still have version 1.0 around if you need it.


You can get there from here


Acknowledgements

Many thanks to David K虍edal <[email protected]> for coming along at just the right time with tempo.el, the basic template code that underlies html-helper-mode. Many of the neat features like completion and field support are because of his good design and programming.

Thanks to Ulrik Dickow for his font-lock code.

Thanks to the author of cc-mode, Barry Warsaw <[email protected]>, his code provided a useful guide in writing this mode (not to mention saving me many hours of formatting C, C++, and Objective C!)

My appreciation to Marc Andreessen <[email protected]>, the author of the original html-mode.

And finally, many thanks to the various people on the net who have been offering encouragement, suggestions, and example code. Y'all're the main reason I'm writing this, and the main reason it's usable.


New HTML document writers should read something like the HTML primer. The references at the bottom of the primer are all worth following. Yahoo has a good index of HTML info on the Web.


Comments and suggestions are highly encouraged.

Nelson Minar <[email protected]>
Last modified: Tue Feb 28 10:32:13 1995