Using FrontPage Navigation Components
Now that you have created a new web from
scratch or by importing files from an existing web site, you are ready to
begin refining your design and adding content to your pages. As a bare
minimum, you will probably want to add shared borders, Navigation Bars and
Page Banners. You may also want to select a theme in order to give your
site a coordinated and more professional look.
Organizing your Web for Easy Navigation
FrontPage makes creating and maintaining navigational links for your
web site easy. However, it's equally easy to get confused and end up with
a mess. Plan the navigation of your site before you begin to create the
pages. If you look around The Smith Family Cyber-Home, you will see that
the site is laid out in sections that are roughly analogous to the rooms
in a house. We have the family room, the guest room, my office and so on.
Each one of these sections has its own set of pages and each of the pages
within a particular section are related to each other in some way. For
example, all of the pages in my office are related to web design and
various aspects of homesteading at Y!GeoCities.
Make a list of the pages you want to include in your site and group
them by topic or type of page. For example, all pages that are about your
family under family or all pages that have links to other places under
links. Staying organized is easier if you create a separate folder in your
web for each group of related files. For example, all of the files linked
to the main page of my Kitchen section are located in a folder called
"kitchen."
Once you have decided on the categories, you can create the
corresponding folders in your FrontPage Web. To create folders, switch to
the Folder View by clicking on View, then Folders. Then, make sure that
none of the existing folders in the right hand side of the window are
selected by clicking once in the blank area of the window. Now click the
right mouse button and select, "New Folder." A brand new folder
will appear and its name will be selected. Type a new name for it and
press the <Enter> key. You will see a message saying that FrontPage
is renaming New_Folder to whatever name you picked. Once you have created
all of the folders you will be needing, you can start creating files and
saving them to these folders.
Using the FrontPage Navigation Bar
As you create your files, you can begin to place the FrontPage
Navigation Bars and Page Banner components. As far as I'm concerned, the
best place for your main Navigation Bar is in one or more of the shared
borders of your page. You won't have to remember to add it to every page
that way. Insert the Navigation Bar into the shared border by clicking in
the border you are going to use. (You can tell where the shared borders
start because of the dotted line between the border and the rest of the
page.) I prefer to place my main Navigation Bar in the bottom shared
border of my pages. Click the Insert menu and select Navigation Bar.
In the dialogue box that appears, you can select the look of your
Navigation Bar (horizontal or vertical, button or text) and which pages
will be included. By the way, button and text look the same unless you are
using a theme. The best pages to include in this shared bar are the
"Child pages under Home." Also click on the check box next to
"Home page" under "Additional Pages to include," so
that your home page will be listed in this area as well.
If your web site has sections, like our kitchen, you may also want to
include a second Navigation Bar on the main section of the page (not in
the shared borders) that lists the pages in the same section with the
current page. When you actually implement the layout of your web site in
the Navigation View (in a later tutorial) you will be creating each
section with a main page and one or more pages beneath it. The main page
should have a Navigation Bar that lists its children. Each of the child
pages should have a Navigation bar that lists its sibling pages and its
parent (which will be listed as "[Up]" in the Navigation Bar.
Insert these bars immediately above the separation between the page and
its shared border (above the dotted line.) For the main page of the
section, select "Child level" and for the subordinate pages,
select "Same level." Another option you can use, if you have a
series of pages that conceptually follow one another (like the pages of
this tutorial) is "Back and next."
Using the Page Banner
The Page Banner component helps you maintain consistency between the
title at the top of the page and the one that appears in the Navigation
Bar. You may not want to use it on every page in your site, so I would not
recommend placing it in a shared border. The source for the title is the
same text that appears in FrontPage's Navigation View and also the text
that will be used to refer to the page in a Navigation Bar. You will want
to keep this text as short as is reasonably possible in order to keep the
Navigation Bar from getting too cluttered. The Page Banner is probably
most useful if you are using a theme for your web site because it can
automatically combine your title with the appropriate banner graphic.
There is no other way to place text on a theme banner short of creating
separate graphics for each page yourself using a program like PaintShop
Pro.
You may be saying to yourself, "Why hasn't Irene talked about
themes?" Two reasons. First, not everybody is going to want to use a
theme, so I wanted to isolate it in its own tutorial. Second, I'm not
completely happy with FrontPage themes right now. I've discovered that
version of Netscape prior to the 6.0 beta don't manage themes too well. I
think because of incompatibilities between the way Netscape and Internet
Explorer interpret stylesheets. With that warning out of the way, you can
continue to the next tutorial, "Using FrontPage Themes," as soon
as it appears next week.
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