John W. Long wrote: > I prefer this one because it makes relative linking easier.
You lost me on that one. John. In the example: root |- A | |- F | |- G |- B |- C To get to a child page (say, page F), the trailing slash is more intuitive: * from example.com/a/ -> href="f/" (you could ="f" too) * from example.com/a -> href="a/f" (a bit weird) Is this what you were referring to? Of course, when accessing siblings (say page B), the trailing slash is less intuitive: * from example.com/a/ -> href="../b/" (also weird) * from example.com/a -> href="b" If this is what you meant, I don't see which way is easier. The implementation of no trailing slash is simpler, though. -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. _______________________________________________ Radiant mailing list Post: [email protected] Search: http://radiantcms.org/mailing-list/search/ Site: http://lists.radiantcms.org/mailman/listinfo/radiant
