Web-Procreate.Com - Datafeed and WebMerge Section


About WebMerge

WebMerge lets you export your database to HTML, generating static Web pages from your database content.

 

WebMerge works with any database or spreadsheet that exports in tab-delimited, Merge, or other tabular format, including FileMaker Pro, Microsoft Access, and AppleWorks. Using HTML template pages you can make with your favorite authoring tool, WebMerge makes a new HTML page from the data in each record of the exported file. WebMerge can also create index pages with links to each of the detail pages. Generated pages can be hosted on any Web server, without the need for a specialized database hosting solution.

 

WebMerge can generate pages right away, using built-in templates, or you can use your own templates customized with the look and feel of your own web site.  Virtually any HTML document can be used as a template for WebMerge to ensure the look and feel you need.

 

Multi-tiered affiliate web sites can easily be built with WebMerge.  Our tutorial, will guide you through every step of the process in creating a fully navigable affiliate web site based on a "data feed" from a merchant.

 

New features in WebMerge, include support for multi-column index page layouts, a new WM-FieldInclude tag which lets you insert a text file or HTML file referenced by a path in your field data, a "Tag Maker" allowing you to visually choose the tag you need - then paste it directly into your template, enhanced support for JavaScript and CSS in navigation tags, and more.

 

WebMerge requires no DLLs, extensions, CGIs, or other components. Everything you need to start generating pages is included in one easy-to-install , and use application.

 

A wide variety of businesses, universities, and other organizations rely on WebMerge daily, ranging from Web designers to the US Library of Congress. Affiliates have begun using WebMerge to handle the ever-changing requirements of merchant data feeds.   Most customers tell us that WebMerge paid for itself with the first project they used it on.