One thing I don't like about Tobi's `navbar.pm` is that the navigation bar is hardcoded instead of computed from what's available. Obviously, this allows for a very customised `navbar` (i.e. not making all pages show up, like a `map` would). However, I think this could also be achieved through page properties. 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 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 for sorting. Also, the code automatically deduces that C and D are second-level under A. 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. --[[madduck]]