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Panel
titleTable of Contents
Child pages (Children Display)
depth2

Site Tab

The site tab gives you an overall view of the information hierarchy of the web site. The site tree represents all the fixed-position content of the web site in one view. This area can be used to create edit and delete sections of the site. The tree also enables you to move branches of content to new locations, allowing you to reorganize the information hierarchy when you need to.

If you have appropriate permissions, you can also secure access to certain regions of the site to create private or "extranet" areas of the site accessible only to members.

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Overview of Site Tree

The site tree corresponds to the information hierarchy of the whole website including the navigation and layout.

The navigation folder is a fundamental building block of the site tree. Each folder represents a section in the website. Image RemovedThe folder label corresponds to the menu label in your navigation structures within the website design. Clicking on a menu item in the web site displays the content sitting under the folder in the site tree.

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Creating New Content

Navigation folders can hold a variety of different content types depending on the set up of your specific website. It is very common for navigation folders to each hold a single HTML content item. In this scenario, the folder corresponds to the navigation menu label and the HTML content item represents the actual page of content.

Info
titleMultiple Page Articles

If you place multiple HTML content items under a single navigation folder then only the first one will actually have a specific navigation reference. This would be desirable if you have a multi-page article but generally you should stick to one folder and one html page.