
28 Developing Sites and Pages
In WebPlus, the Site Structure tree (in the Site tab) provides a visual aid that lets
you organize the content on your site into sections and levels—in other words as
a hierarchy of parent pages branching to child pages. Here's how the same
structure might appear in the WebPlus Site Structure tree:
The Site Structure tree makes it easy to
visualize relationships between pages and
lay out your site in a way that makes sense
for the content you have to offer. Of
course, a website is truly an interconnected
web of pages, and the tree structure doesn't
prevent you from installing links between
any two pages. But it does expose the
major pathways within your site—up,
down, and sideways. Logical section/level
design makes your site easier to navigate,
and WebPlus makes it simple to create
navigation bars that mirror your site
structure and help guide your visitors along
those "main roads."
Incidentally, WebPlus also supports
offsite links which can be inserted
into the Site Structure as for any
other page. Either page entry is
slightly different in design to a
standard web page to indicate that it
points to a location outside of the
website.
As an example, compare a standard
web page "Sales" with the offsite
link "Member's forum."
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