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WebPlus Essentials User Guide - Serif

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Developing Sites and Pages 27<br />

Understanding site structure and navigation<br />

Unlike a printed publication, a website doesn't depend on a linear page<br />

sequence. When designing a site, it makes more sense to think of the site in<br />

spatial terms, with a structure like that of a museum which people will explore.<br />

You can generally assume that your visitors will come in through the "front<br />

door" (the Home page)—but where they go after that depends on the links<br />

you've provided. These navigation pathways are like corridors that connect the<br />

various rooms of the museum. It's up to you as the "architect" to develop a<br />

sensible arrangement of pages and links so that visitors can find their way<br />

around easily, without getting lost.<br />

In <strong>WebPlus</strong>, you can use the Site Structure tree to visually map out the<br />

structure of your site and then add navigation bars—that dynamically adapt to<br />

the structure you've defined.<br />

Site structure<br />

Unlike the museum in our analogy, the "structure" of a website has nothing to do<br />

with its physical layout, or where pages are stored. Rather, it's a way of logically<br />

arranging the content on the site so that visitors have an easier time navigating<br />

through it. One of the most useful organizing principles—which <strong>WebPlus</strong><br />

strongly reinforces—is an "inverted tree" structure that starts with the Home<br />

page and then branches out to other pages. To the visitor navigating your site,<br />

this arrangement presents your content in a familiar, hierarchical way, structured<br />

into sections and levels.<br />

• A section is a content category, for example "Who's Who?,"<br />

"Products," or "Links." The various major sections are typically listed<br />

on the site's Home page in a navigation bar. Ideally, each page on the<br />

site belongs to a particular section. And unless there's only one page in<br />

a given section, the section will have its own main page, which usually<br />

serves as a menu for subsidiary pages.<br />

• The level is the number of steps (i.e., jumps) a given page is removed<br />

from the Home page. The Home page will always reside at Level 1,<br />

normally along with main section menu pages. This allows navigation<br />

bars to work easily and automatically. Pages one step "below" the<br />

section menu pages reside at Level 2, and so on.

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