Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 8 Next »

The editing experience

Sitefinity has a very minimalistic editing interface.  This example shows what editing a "Research Article" looks like.  It shares many elements with the other full-page content types like people and events. 

Let's break apart what's here to help you get used to the conventions Sitefinity uses and work as efficiently as possible. 

Editing interface example


Sections 

The left-side of the page contains a list of links to regions within the page that you're editing.   If you wanted to edit the "Related People" for this research article , clicking that link immediately brings you down to that portion of the page to change containing that information.   

Publishing tools

On the top-right of the page are your "workflow" buttons.  To make your edits visible to website visitors, click the green "Publish" button.  To save updates you have made to the page without making them public, click "Save as Draft".  

Title

The field at the top of every type of content in Sitefinity is the "Title" field.  Depending on which content you're editing determines what becomes of the information you enter here.  In the full content types (people, news & research articles, events, etc.), this becomes part of the page's URL (web address), and likely becomes main heading displayed on the page.  This title often is NOT displayed the same way for the smaller page elements (cards, spotlights, callouts, etc.).  In the smaller page elements, the title is extremely important when it comes to searching for content that you want to place on a page.

Expanding & collapsing sections

Using the "Book or Research Article Title" field as an example, you can see the circular icon has a downward pointing arrow next to it.  Each item can be expanded or collapsed to show or hide what's in it.  Collapsing these helps minimize visual distractions.   

Help boxes


Again using the  "Book or Research Article Title" field in the screenshot above, we have strategically placed help tips on various fields to assist editors in better understanding how to input data or what that field might be used for when the page containing this information is displayed.    

  • No labels