Ben, I appreciate your perspectives, although I want to address a few things for the sake of those migrating from Muse. Pinegrow and Dreamweaver are completely different tools. The former is purely for designers and non-coders, while the latter is for code-savvy designers/developers. As an example, how does Pinegrow interact with a database like this video from Wappler? My point was DW is not a good design tool, although without Muse in place it's really the only "design" tool in the Adobe suite for a professional designer now. You can use it as a design tool, of course, and that probably makes sense if you are heavily into the coding as well. For those of us who spend most of our time designing, a tool like DW is slow and costly. Since this is a thread about replacing Muse, we can assume that most people affected by its cancellation are designers, not coders or developers. Most of us don't need an app that interacts with a database. If we did, we've already found other solutions for it. I do not know what makes you say that Dreamweaver was incapable of parsing the HTML files produced by Muse, namely any text editor, including Dreamweaver, can open an HTML document because it is no more that a text file, no parsing required. Yes, the CSS produced by Muse is extremely messy, reason why code-savvy web developers have never warmed to Muse. It's a frequent complaint by DW users that Muse CSS is a mess and is not handled well by DW and thus Muse generated code opened in DW is usually problematic. However, this is as much a failing with DW as it is with Muse, since there is nothing technically wrong with Muse CSS. The fact that Pinegrow can handle it fine is a plus in their favor and deserves to be mentioned for the sake of those migrating from Muse. Great reasons for non-coders to choose Pinegrow. But keep an open mind, there is also Wappler which can do both front- and back-end development Your First Bootstrap 4 Page - YouTube Yes, but again, keep in mind this thread is all about those migrating away from Muse. If Muse is an important tool for a designer, then back-end development is probably not a high priority for you. For the work that I do, for instance, it's rare that a client has back-end needs. Most of my work is front end for clients who want beautiful sites to promote their products or services and often quite quickly.
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