SUMMARY
This article describes the functionality and use of navigation bars in the
Navigation view of Microsoft FrontPage 2000.
The navigation bar is a graphical or textual page element that incorporates
navigation hyperlinks to pages that are part of a FrontPage Web. Navigation
bars are created automatically when you create a FrontPage Web by using a
wizard or by creating a navigational structure in Navigation view in
FrontPage.
The navigation bar works in conjunction with Navigation view in FrontPage.
This allows FrontPage to automatically regenerate navigation bars
every time you change the structure of your Web.
Navigation view allows you to create a hierarchical structure proceeding
from the home page to any or all pages in your FrontPage Web. Navigation
view also allows you to see and alter this structure of links from any page
in your Web.
Although the navigation bar properties may look the same on each page
throughout the Web, the actual navigation bar generated by FrontPage is unique to the individual page on which it appears.
The exact links generated by the navigation bar are determined by the
relative position of the current page in relation to the remainder of the
navigational structure. These relative links are referred to by the terms
Parent Level, Same Level, Back and Next, Child Level, Top Level, Home Page,
and Parent Page.
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Parent Level
This option creates links to all pages connected by a horizontal line at
the level of the Navigation view immediately above the current page. Links
will not be created for pages not connected by a horizontal line at the
level immediately above the current page.
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Same Level
This option creates links to all pages connected by a horizontal line to
the current page. Pages not connected to the current page by a horizontal
line will not be included.
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Back and Next
This option creates either one or two links to the files connected by a
horizontal line to the left of the current page (back) and/or to the right
of the current page (next). Pages all the way on the left end of a level in
the structure are connected by a Next link, while pages all the way on the
right of the structure are connected by a Back link. Links will not be
created for pages if no other files are immediately adjacent and connected
by a horizontal line.
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Child Level
This option creates links to all pages connected by a horizontal line at
the level of the navigational structure immediately below the current page.
Links will not be created on pages that are not connected by a horizontal
line at the level below the current page.
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Top Level
The home page or any page that is present in the navigational structure,
which is not connected by a line from another page, is considered a
top-level page. A top-level page always includes the home page. However, it
also includes any pages present in Navigation view that are not connected
to other pages by means of a horizontal or vertical line.
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Home Page
This option is not relative to the location of the current page in the
navigational structure. It always generates a link to the home page of your
FrontPage Web.
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Parent page
This option creates a link to the individual file directly above the
current page and connected by a vertical line in Navigation view.
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Adding a New Page
When you create a new page in your web, it is not automatically added to
the hierarchical structure you see in Navigation view. You can add pages
to the structure by switching to Navigation view, clicking the page you
want to add in the Files pane, and then dragging it to the Navigation
pane. When you drag a file in this way, a line automatically appears,
connecting it to the nearest page. Drag the new page until the line drawn
connects the page to the page you want to use as its parent.
NOTE: A "circle-slash" icon indicates that the action cannot be carried out. Usually this means that the page already exists in the navigational
structure. A page can exist in one place only in the structure.
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Moving Pages Within the Structure
If you decide that the page should be somewhere else in the structure, you
can drag the page from its current location to the new location and
FrontPage will redraw the connecting line as you move it.
For more information about navigation bar properties, click
Microsoft FrontPage Help on the
Help menu, type
navigation bar properties in the Office Assistant or
the Answer Wizard, and then click
Search to view the topics
returned.
For more information about navigation bars, click
Microsoft FrontPage Help on the
Help menu, type
navigation bars in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard, and then click
Search to view the topic.
For additional information about inserting a navigation bar on a page that has no peer pages, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
196568 FP2000: Navigation Bars Do Not Appear on the Home Page
If you insert a navigation bar on a page that does not use themes, it will
appear as text. When you apply a theme, the graphical appearance of the
navigation bar will be defined by the theme. All built-in themes behave
this way. If you do not see a navigational structure in Navigation view
when you create your navigation bar, your navigation bar will appear
as text even if you then apply a theme. For additional information about themes, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Inserting the navigation bar within a shared border region allows you to
add, modify, or delete navigation bars across your Web site easily.
For additional information, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
196778 FP2000: What are Shared Borders and How to Turn Them On and Off
When you insert a navigation bar in the main body of a FrontPage Web
outside of the shared border region of your page, you can successfully
create a navigation bar that does not share the same properties as the
navigation bar used in the rest of the FrontPage Web. Although this works well
for FrontPage-based extended Web servers, the navigation bar outside the
shared border region does not appear correctly if you publish to a server
where the FrontPage 1.1 or 97 Server Extensions are installed.
For additional information, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
175727 FP98: Page Banner/Navigation Bar Don't Display on Published Page
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Inserting a Navigation Bar
To insert a navigation bar in FrontPage Editor, follow these steps:
- On the Insert menu, click Navigation Bar.
- In the Navigation Bar Properties dialog box, select the options you want.
- Click OK.
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