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I am scouting the market for a good WYSIWYG editor. My users are going to write stuff just like I'm doing now on Stack Overflow, but they aren't as tech-savvy as the SO users, so I need a WYSIWYG editor instead of this Markdown editor.

Feature-wise, I'd like the editor to have approximately the same features as the buttons that this editor has, i.e. bold/italic/links/quotes/lists(numbered/bulleted)/headings. More features are of course interesting.

I'd like the editor not to save in HTML, but instead use some other format, like BBCode or Markdown. This is since I want to minimize the probability of our users injecting scripts or any other nastiness into our database.

There is a lot of different WYSIWYG editors out there, like FCKeditor, TinyMCE etc etc, but unfortunately most of them save in HTML.

TinyMCE has a BBCode mode, though, but I read that TinyMCE is kind of bloated. I stumbled upon a Markdown WYSIWYG project which seems to be more or less dead.

Do you have any other recommendations?

It's a plus if the editor is built on jQuery.

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4 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

You should look following,

wysihat is clean and fresh start and supported by design savvy company :-)

http://github.com/37signals/wysihat/tree/master

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vote up 2 vote down

You should check out MarkItUp (http://markitup.jaysalvat.com/home/). It is built on jQuery and has support for various markup syntaxes (Markdown, wiki, BBcode, etc). Also, I believe it is fairly lightweight (at least more so than tinyMCE or FCKeditor).

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vote up 1 vote down

Maybe this list of lightweight markup languages might help you in your search.

Creole engine support
MediaWIKI Editor
Textile
Texy! Playground
txt2tags online

Some of these have tools and some only have online demos, it all depends on the community and how far along the project is.

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Well, could you accompany the list with which editors support which lightweight language, I'd be happy. – Thomas Lundström Mar 25 at 15:04
Thanks for your effort, but so far, none of those links were to WYSIWYG editors, but markup textboxes that generate html, which isn't good enough, I'm afraid. My users would not love to write adhering to the textile syntax. – Thomas Lundström Mar 25 at 15:27
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Have you considered using a web-based editor or even a content management system for this? There are a number of CMSs/wikis with decent, safe web page editors. Drupal, Plone and Atlassian Confluence are first to come to my mind.

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