Yes, I do see ASP listed, but admittedly it's only one article (Setting up an ASP development environment). As you're aware, Nancy, details of what will be in future versions of Dreamweaver are rarely, if ever, announced in advance. Adobe took the unusual step in August 2007 of announcing what would be dropped from Dreamweaver CS4. I have no idea whether a similar announcement will be made this time. However, the FAQ concerning the decision to discontinue ADDT makes this point: Therefore, in order to help our web professional customers take
advantage of the functionalities brought by the rising use of CMS
frameworks and the strong web design capabilities of Dreamweaver, we
have decided to focus our efforts on delivering features in Dreamweaver
that will help developers easily and quickly integrate, brand, and
customize prebuilt components, instead of going through a separate
tool. I realize that classic ASP is still popular, but if I were making a business decision as to where to put my resources, it would be pretty low on my list of priorities. I started with ASP about 10 years ago, but realized pretty quickly that Microsoft was planning to dump it in favour of .NET. Since .NET wasn't mature enough at the time, I made the switch to PHP. With hindsight, it was the right choice.
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