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Once known as the "1st Java Navigator," eNavigator may be the last navigation builder you need for a long time. Pointing, clicking and typing titles is all it takes for someone with no Web experience-let alone Java chops-to create professional-looking site navigation panels that exude hard-earned talent.
The tab-and-tree navigation panel you make guides visitors to their main area of interest when they click a tab, which presents them with an organized, expanding list of subtopics so they can find the exact content they need without leaving the top Web page. The first page they actually move to will be the one they are looking for. If a topic visitors have in mind doesn't appear in your tab words or tree descriptions, they can click the keyword site-search icon. ENavigator has a check box to automatically index keywords from metafiles in Web pages as you add their URLs.
For the tab-and-tree model, eNavigator generates a Java applet with node information either tucked within the Java applet or in an external file. You can also do tab-only or tree-only styles, and eNavigator supports JavaScript tree-view or drop-down list styles, DHTML StartButton style, and pure HTML floating windows and site map styles. Java-for the elegant tab-and-tree interface only-requires visitors to have a...