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I thought Dreamweaver was long since dead. It may have improved (though a few snarky Reddit comments suggest not) but it was one of the WYSIWYG type editors that @gbj_tester was talking about. It's a quick way to put together a page but hard to maintain because styling leaks into content leaks into page layout.
Modern web development is very modular in its design.
Trivial example - when text is large and blue it's not because you've tagged that particular bit large and blue, it's because you've tagged it with a particular style and then the style sheet elsewhere defines large and blue, and then when you change the style sheet everything that points to it changes in tandem. The drag and drop / WYSIWYG nature of Dreamweaver makes it easy to get out of that habit and a website that looks alright with a couple of pages on day 0 looks a bit shit as it grows and you tweak it.
If someone was a web designer and asked which DSLR and lenses they should get for a few placeholder images you'd tell them to get a camera phone and focus on the website design because the camera phone will do 90% of what they need in 10% of the time.
So that argument - unless you want to learn web design then a Wordpress/Squarespace would let you focus on selling houses.I've got GeneratePress (https://generatepress.com/) as a plugin for my Tri club's Wordpress website
Something like this could be very easily adapted for real estate
https://gpsites.co/pixel/
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Dreamweaver (...) it was one of the WYSIWYG type editors that @gbj_tester was talking about.
Dreamweaver was built to annoy the fuck out of everybody who was unfortunate enough to deal with it's code later. Code from hell, page after page.
Mostly for real estate photography (for selling houses as opposed photos for leisure).
I've got Dreamweaver as part of my Adobe package. Is that worth a punt instead?