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  • There are three navigation layers:

    • Top-level: displays in the white bar next to the search button

    • Secondary: displays in the drop-down menu

    • Third-level: displays in the drop-down menu under the secondary navigation

  • Your site’s top-level navigation can onlybe all direct links with no drop-down navigation, or all have a drop-down menu. This is an accessibility requirement. Follow the instructions for mixed navigation (both drop-down and direct links) if your site has mixed navigation.

  • While you can nest navigation items beyond the third-level, they will all display the same as third-level navigation.

  • If you have secondary menu items with third-level items and secondary menu items without third-level items in a drop-down menu, the secondary items without third-level will always group together to the right of the menu.

  • Your top-level menu is limited by the amount of space you have. When adding pages to it, review the spacing to see check if you need to rename menu link titles so it doesn't look "shoved together".  

Expand
titleAdd a page to navigation by editing the page

Not all pages have this option. When editing a page that does have this option, you'll see notice a "Menu Settings" section in the right sidebar of the page.

To add the page to your site’s navigation, expand the “Menu Settings” and select “Provide a menu link” to add the page to your site’s navigation.

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The URLs for each of your pages default to the page title. However, you can customize the URLs for landing pages and a few other page types. If a page you’re editing has that option, you’ll see notice a "URL Alias" option on the right side of the page.

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