This Page...
Publishers may create a range of extra pages, each of which can have extra pages of their own, extending the hierarchy without artificial limit.
Pages may be restricted to people who have registered with the organisation on the site. If a page has been restricted in this way, and you're not logged-in, there won't be any navigation links to it. But if you've logged-in (and have registered with the organisation whose page you're looking at), the site will create a This Section panel just like the one on the organisation homepage. The variant file for this page shows this in action.
Publishers may structure their pages using two levels of subheading. They may optionally choose to get the CMS to include a set of This Page links at the top of the page, as exemplified here. Be aware that not all pages will include this construct.
The This Page links may be built from both levels of subheading, or just the first. On this page, the panel is built from both.
A publisher may, if they choose, embed pretty much arbitrary HTML into their page, but we do discourage this. The content editor itself has a variety of constructs that are in easy reach, however:
And, additionally:
The editor contains a button to allow the easy creation of tables, each of which will have the simpletable class:
| Like | This |
|---|---|
| lorem ipsum dolores etc | lorem ipsum dolores etc |
...or...
| Like | lorem ipsum dolores etc |
|---|---|
| This | lorem ipsum dolores etc |
Tables don't have to be centred like that. I just prefer it that way.
Any paragraph can have alignment, including right-alignment.
Finally, images can be brought into a page. The editor scales down images wider than 500px, although images can be smaller still.

There's one further image option of note.
Images may be floated to the right or left, using the floatright and floatleft classes.