So imagine four pages A, B, A/C, and A/D, and these pages would include the
following directives, respectively
- \[[navbar id=main priority=3]]
- \[[navbar id=main priority=5]]
- \[[navbar id=main title="Something else"]]
- \[[navbar id=main]]
-
-then the computed navigation bar would be
-
- B
- A
- Something else
- D
+ \[[!navbaritem navbar=main priority=3]]
+ \[[!navbaritem navbar=main priority=5]]
+ \[[!navbaritem navbar=main title="Something else"]]
+ \[[!navbaritem navbar=main]]
+
+then one could insert `\[[!navbar id=main maxlevels=0]]` somewhere and it
+would get replaced with (this being in the context of viewing page C):
+
+ <ol class="navbar" id="navbar_main">
+ <li><a href="../B">B</a></li>
+ <li><a href="../A">A</a>
+ <ol>
+ <li class="current">Something else</li>
+ <li><a href="D">D</a></li>
+ </ol>
+ </li>
+ </ol>
B would sort before A because it has a higher priority, but C would sort
before D because their priorities are equal. The overridden title is not used
Also, the code automatically deduces that C and D are second-level under A.
-Obviously, while on e.g. A/C, the `<li>` element enclosing C would get a special CSS class (or even ID), and no `<a>` tag inside.
-
I don't think this is hard to code up and it's what I've been using with
[rest2web](http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/rest2web/) and it's served me
well.
+There is a problem though if this navbar were included in a sidebar (the logical place): if a page is updated, the navbar needs to be rebuilt which causes the sidebar to be rebuilt, which causes the whole site to be rebuilt. Unless we can subscribe only to title changes, this will be pretty bad...
+
--[[madduck]]
[[!tag wishlist]]