This folder contains examples of more advanced template system usage.
You can embed navigation links either in the template page in the content.
If you insert the following line into your HTML source:
<div id="template_navigation_ancestors_horizontal"></div>
This is the result, often called a "breadcrumb trail":
The names are determined by looking up the folder hierarchy towards the
root of your site and taking
the page titles of any default.* or index.* files found. (If there's more than
one such file in a single folder, you'll be notified of the problem when you apply templates.)
The page title means the content of the <title> element, unless you've defined a <meta name="DC.Title">
to override it. The <title> often includes
redundant information such as the site name, for the benefit of users who save the page
in their bookmarks or favorites, so for navigation purposes you often want to override
it with a shorter version.
Here's another format for the breadcrumb trial:
<div id="template_navigation_ancestors_outline"></div>
And here are some variants of the list of child pages:
<div id="template_navigation_children_topicslist"></div>
<div id="template_navigation_children_icons"></div>
<div id="template_navigation_children_blockquote"></div>
<div id="template_navigation_children_topicsblockquote"></div>
<div id="template_navigation_children_list"></div>
Why have both "list" and "topicslist", or "blockquote" and "topicsblockquote", when
you could just place the word "Topics:" before the whole thing and be done with it,
you ask? Because it would look weird if the list turned out to be empty. If there
are no child pages, the "topics" variants don't print anything at all.