Using Optional Regions

Templates provide consistent design. While consistency is generally a good thing, it can also get boring. Furthermore, there may be times when you want the flexibility to include information on some template-based pages but not on others.

Dreamweaver provides a template tool aimed at letting you vary a page’s design while still maintaining page-to-page consistency: optional regions. An optional region is simply part of a template you can hide or display on each template-based page (see Figure 19-13). When a page author creates a new page based on the template, she can turn the region on or off.

Now you see it, now you don’t. Optional regions let you show or hide content on a page-by-page basis. In these examples, the template page (top) has an optional region containing a box with Cafe Soylent Green’s location and hours (circled). When you create a page from this template, you can either display the optional region (right) or hide it (bottom).

Figure 19-13. Now you see it, now you don’t. Optional regions let you show or hide content on a page-by-page basis. In these examples, the template page (top) has an optional region containing a box with Cafe Soylent Green’s location and hours (circled). When you create a page from this template, you can either display the optional region (right) or hide it (bottom).

Adding an Optional Region

Creating an optional region is a snap. Just select the HTML code you want to make optional and do one of the following:

  • On the Common category of the Insert panel, select the Optional Region option from the Templates menu.

  • Choose Insert→Template Objects→Optional Region.

  • Right-click (Control-click) the selection and choose Templates→New Optional Region from the shortcut menu.

In the New Optional ...

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