Sites, pages, and sections
Three words — site, page, section — show up a lot. Here they are without the boring tech lecture.
Site = your whole project
One site might be “Grandma’s bakery,” another might be “School science fair.” Each site has its own pages and settings — like one notebook per project so nothing gets mixed up.
Page = one address on the web
“Home,” “About,” “Contact” — those are usually separate pages. Each page has its own spot in the address bar at the top of the browser (the words after your site name). You don’t have to understand how that works — Builder picks sensible names when you create a page. You can rename pages from the page list if your screen lets you.
Section = one stripe on the page
Imagine a poster made of horizontal strips taped together: a big photo on top, then a row of three cards, then a quote, then a footer. Each strip is a section. You can add, move, or delete sections inside the editor.
| Word | Think of it as… |
|---|---|
| Site | The whole website project — all pages together. |
| Page | One screen visitors can open — like one chapter. |
| Section | One horizontal chunk on that page — like one verse of a song. |
Words on Google
When you fill in titles and short descriptions for pages, you’re helping search engines understand your site. You can skip the fancy stuff at first — just write what humans would want to read.
Ready to build? Go to The big editing screen.