Hi,
I need to create a page which comes under different menus without duplication of that page. I googled about taxonomy but i don't think its not related to my requirements.
Eg: Menu -->
Sub Menu1 --> Page1 (same page)
Sub Menu 2 --> Page1 (same page)
Sub menu 3 -- > Page 3
Can anyone please give some suggestion on this . Thanks in advance.
Thanks,
Mohamedh Nishadh
Solved! Go to Solution.
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Hi,
First of all, any answer to this question isn't easy, because the answer has implications in the way how you structure your website. I really recommend you to get in touch with someone how's already done that.
Then, the standard way to build a navigation is just by structuring the pages into hierarchies. The pages on the top level become the menu items, and the pages beneath these top level pages become the sub-items. This approach is recommended by Adobe and also implemented for example in Geometrixx. It has a number of pros and cons:
The negative aspect of this approach:
So, it looks like that this approach isn't the right match. But your requirement doesn't make sense to me. If a page appears on multiple locations in the navigation, the content doesn't really fit. I also don't get your example about the laptop page being displayed both under "computers" and "electronic gadgets". Do you really want display the same content in both places.
So, please get in touch with someone experienced in that domain. I don't recommend another approach, because in the long term they cause problems as well (normally bigger ones).
kind regards,
Jörg
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Hi,
So with "different menus" you mean the menu (navigation) on your pages? So does this also mean, that your navigation does not necessarily reflect the page structure?
If that's a In that case I would suggest to create something (preferably a node structure, one item is reflected by a node), which reflects your navigation; and inside this node structure link the items in the menu with the pages on your site. Of course this has to be completely changeable by authors :-) Of course that's the generic and most flexible solutions, and there are possibly lots of ways to achieve the same with different approaches, maybe even with less effort.
kind regards,
Jörg
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And i found an option copy page properties in sidekick . Its creating same page to new location . But when i change the content in original page. It's not reflecting in copied page.
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From the menu - simply link to the CQ web page.
Tags will not help you build menus that pull up CQ web pages.
If you want to build menus in CQ pages - look at using JQuery plugins - such as:
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Hi jorg,
Thanks for your response. Can you please explain little bit elaborately. Am newbie to this domain.
Yes i meant navigation. Can you please go through the my reply to mac. I have clearly mentioned my requirement on that reply. I really appreciate your effort.
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Look at the navigation component and how to build it in this AEM topic:
http://docs.adobe.com/docs/en/aem/6-0/develop/the-basics/website.html
To achieve your results - you will have to code the logic in your Navigation component. As Joerg points out - since you are not following the code structure - you need to develop app logic which reflects your navigation.
Here is the code for the nav component in the article. You need to modify this to reflect your nav requirements.
<%@include file="/libs/foundation/global.jsp"%><%
%><%@ page import="java.util.Iterator,
com.day.text.Text,
com.day.cq.wcm.api.PageFilter, com.day.cq.wcm.api.Page" %><%
/* get starting point of navigation */
Page navRootPage = currentPage.getAbsoluteParent(2);
if (navRootPage == null && currentPage != null) {
navRootPage = currentPage;
}
if (navRootPage != null) {
Iterator<Page> children = navRootPage.listChildren(new PageFilter(request));
while (children.hasNext()) {
Page child = children.next();
%><a href="<%= child.getPath() %>.html"><%=child.getTitle() %></a><%
}
}
%>
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Hi,
First of all, any answer to this question isn't easy, because the answer has implications in the way how you structure your website. I really recommend you to get in touch with someone how's already done that.
Then, the standard way to build a navigation is just by structuring the pages into hierarchies. The pages on the top level become the menu items, and the pages beneath these top level pages become the sub-items. This approach is recommended by Adobe and also implemented for example in Geometrixx. It has a number of pros and cons:
The negative aspect of this approach:
So, it looks like that this approach isn't the right match. But your requirement doesn't make sense to me. If a page appears on multiple locations in the navigation, the content doesn't really fit. I also don't get your example about the laptop page being displayed both under "computers" and "electronic gadgets". Do you really want display the same content in both places.
So, please get in touch with someone experienced in that domain. I don't recommend another approach, because in the long term they cause problems as well (normally bigger ones).
kind regards,
Jörg
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Thanks for your reply jorg. And for your question, yes the content for the both pages are same which comes under the category computers and electronic gadgets.
For that particular reason only. I don't need to have different pages, and if we have two pages (not two pages, may be we will have multiple pages) we need to change each page content manually at the time of authoring mode.
This is what my total concern about the issue.
Thanks,
Moahmedh Nishadh
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Hi Moahmedh,
still, the question remains hard. And still my recommendation holds true: get in touch with someone who already has gained experience in that area. This topic might start small, but if you start to allow this, you open a can of worms ...
What you could do is a kind of middle-thing between. First, give this page a home and put it somewhere in your content tree, where it makes most sense. And then implement a traditional navigation component, which is based on the page hierarchy in the repository. At the location, where this has to occurr a second time, create a "proxy page", which links to page you want to have two times in the navigation. And then enhance your navigation component to deal with this proxy page. Instead of reading all information from the proxy page (and traversing down the tree to build any kind of sub menu) it just goes over to the linked page, reads the properties from there and also gets any children from there.
I can imagine, that this might work. You add a bit of complexity to your navigation, but you don't have to maintain any copies of the page.
kind regards,
Jörg
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I think this will help. The term "proxy page " is new to me .Let me analyze this and will try to implement your recommendation. Thanks a lot.
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