G'kar (and anyone else interested),
I prefer Linux, but I also prefer the CoffeeCup HTML Editor to alternative editors available on Linux.
What to do? I'm running a VirtualBox virtual machine on Linux. Within that virtual machine I have installed Windows 8.1. I run the CoffeeCup HTML Editor and other Windows-dependent CoffeeCup products on that Windows installation.
[If you'd like to pursue running CoffeeCup's software in a virtual machine on Linux, I'd be happy to explain offline via the email address beneath this post.]
This doesn't save me any money. Indeed, the Windows OEM installation disk and license cost me $130. I do it because I prefer Linux, yet there are a few applications I value that are not built for Linux. These are CoffeeCup's software, Intuit's QuickBooks and a couple of very nice Microsoft game titles.
Sorry to perhaps have confused with the discussion of synchronizing. That turned out to be a red herring entirely. I tried (but apparently failed) in my previous post to explain that I had avoided the Editor's project management feature out of worry. For the last couple of years, I was dual-booting between Windows XP and Linux. I modified the same set of Web site files using one OS or the other from time to time. (Linux makes it easy to access the NTFS partitions that Windows creates.) Not understanding exactly how the Editor's project management feature worked, I feared that doing something with Editor Project files while running Linux might screw up the Project altogether: Perhaps I would subvert something in the Windows Registry, for instance. Rather than dig into the matter, I elected to simply not use Editor Projects.
I now understand that there was no possibility of a synchronization problem with my jumping around between Windows and Linux due to the design of the Projects feature. Furthermore, a synchronization problem is no longer even possible with the virtual machine setup: I now edit ONLY with the CC HTML Editor.
My point was that I missed out using Editor Projects for several years out of worry. If I could make that mistake, so could other rookie users. And that's too bad.
It's creepy to find a file unrelated to ones work objective included among ones work-related files. That's the conceptual objection to the .cpf file. Certainly the .cpf file can be moved and updated, as Rolly suggests. Alternatively, one can remember not to upload it to the server, or to delete it from the server after a bulk site upload. Ron points out that it's clunky to have to do that manually, something that has nothing to do with creating Web pages. Further, he is leery of his customer perhaps noticing the .cpf file on the server and being uncomfortable. Finally, certainly Jo Ann is correct that my proposal would not prevent uploading the .cpf file to the server via an external FTP program.
In defense of my proposal, it would involve merely adding an "advanced configuration" sort of checkbox to the Editor's FTP setup GUI. If the box defaulted to "don't transfer .cpf file to the server," casual users wouldn't notice, Ron and I would be slightly happier, there would be no need to replace the Editor's present simple and robust Projects feature with something else, and so there would be no reverse-compatibility problem for CoffeeCup to handle.
I say, don't worry, be happy. It's not a big deal, not even a tempest in a coffee cup. But I'd gladly accept that check box if Scott & Company offered it.
halfnium -AT- alum.mit.edu
Yes, I looked just like that in 1962.