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BlueGriffon - Wikipedia

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Web and EPUB Editor based on the rendering engine of Firefox

BlueGriffon Developer(s) Daniel Glazman Final release

3.1

[1][2] 

/ 4 December 2017

Repository Written in C/C++, JavaScript, CSS, XUL, XBL Operating system Microsoft Windows
macOS
Linux Platform Cross-platform Available in 20 languages[3]

List of languages

English (USA), Czech, German, Spanish (Castellano), Finnish, French (France), Galician, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Slovene, Swedish, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Hungarian, Serbian.

Type HTML editor License MPL-2.0
Proprietary license for most add-ons Website bluegriffon.org

BlueGriffon was a WYSIWYG content editor for the World Wide Web. It is based on the discontinued Nvu editor, which in turn is based on the Composer component of the Mozilla Application Suite, which was previously known as Netscape Composer, which was bundled with Netscape Gold before it was renamed to Netscape Communicator. Powered by Gecko, the rendering engine of Firefox, it can edit Web pages in conformance to Web Standards. It ran on Microsoft Windows, macOS and Linux.

BlueGriffon complies with the W3C's web standards. It can create and edit pages in accordance to HTML 4, XHTML 1.1, HTML 5 and XHTML 5. It supports CSS 2.1 and all parts of CSS 3 already implemented by Gecko. BlueGriffon also includes SVG-edit, an XUL-based editor for SVG that is originally distributed as an add-on to Firefox and was adapted to BlueGriffon.

Versions are free to download on Internet Archive and is compatible with Windows, macOS and Linux.

Two enhancements are available via add-ons: 'FireFTP' and 'Dictionaries' in 13 languages, free to download on Internet Archive.

BlueGriffon is now discontinued, explained on the web page.

Disruptive Innovations was one of five Innovation award winners for its BlueGriffon project during the Demo Cup organized as part of the 2010 Open World Forum held in Paris in October 2010.[4]

In 2013, Disruptive Innovations received the META Seal of Recognition from the Multilingual Europe Technology Alliance for being the first editor to implement the three main data categories of the W3C Internationalization Tag Set 2.0[5]


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