In addition, Like all of the Creative Cloud Suite, Adobe Dreamweaver requires an ongoing subscription to Creative Cloud in order to use it. To learn how to use it properly takes many months of learning. The general interface of Dreamweaver hasn't changed a great deal but it's still very much a tool for professionals. However, you can't export projects to other applications such as Photoshop and Illustrator for example. Adobe Dreamweaver is of course seamlessly integrated with the rest of Creative Suite. There are couple of ready made HTML and CSS style sheets included but you'll need a basic knowledge of CSS and HTML to get going with Dreamweaver. You can easily shift and rearrange these elements until you're happy with the exact layout.
Inserting elements is a breeze offering you maximum flexibility to drag and drop or insert by code images, video, audio and more. Alternatively, you can opt for a full code view or if you want your cake and eat it, see both at once in a split view. Like previous versions, Adobe Dreamweaver follows the WYSIWYG (What You See is What You Get) philosophy so you can see exactly what you're doing with every change in code.