User Guide

About us. Typically, this page relates or links to company histories, con-
tact information, mission statements, and so on.
Help/support. Many companies use these pages to provide answers to fre-
quently asked questions or to a site map.
Miscellaneous. These items (job opportunities, locations/driving directions,
legal/copyright/privacy statement, and related links) are typically
downplayed on sites because they are either static or are updated
infrequently.Use these page types to help generate ideas as you develop
your web content.
Add Pages to a Web’s Navigation Structure
Procedure
Reference:
Adding pages to a web’s navigation structure allows FrontPage to help manage
your files and put buttons on your web’s link bars. Depending on the link bar’s
properties, each page in the structure can represent a single button on a link
bar. To add pages to a web’s navigation structure:
1
If necessary, switch to Navigation view.
2
If you are adding existing pages from the Folder List:
a. Select the page in the Folder List.
b. Drag it into the contents area and drop it below the desired page.
If you are adding a new page to the navigation structure,
a. In the Navigation view contents area, select the page that will be
above the new page.
b. Click the Create A New Normal Page button. (The new page will be
added below the selected page.)
3
Rename the pages’ filenames, Navigation view names, and page titles as
needed.
Generally, webs have one of two main structure types: flat or hierarchical.
Similar to books, flat structures, the top structure in Figure 3-2, require visitors
to navigate a site in a linear fashion—usually clicking from left to right, from
one page to the next—with all information treated with equal importance. A
flat structure is very rarely used for an entire web because it lacks the flexibil-
ity of hierarchical structures. However, you can use a flat structure if you have
pages that you want visitors to view in order, like a slide show presentation for
instance.
LESSON 3
FrontPage 2002 Level 1
40
Reference Material
Please Do Not Copy